Does it?
The after-life as a concept? Yes, I think it makes sense - assuming you can conceive the possibility of something more than what you currently experience.
Not if it means focussing on the perceived benefits of an after-life, rather than focussing on the life someone actually has.
I don't think it's straightforward - I think it depends on the circumstances and your interpretations of the competing concepts.
When I was a kid (from about ages 5-6yrs) my brother (a year older than me) and I each competed to receive 5p daily each morning depending on who was ready for school first. We were required to be breakfasted, dressed and ready for school by 7.55am every morning to be walked to school with some other kids by a lady who got paid for the service (my parents had jobs to get to so didn't have time).
My grandmother would help us get ready - we had some specific tasks we needed to complete and my brother would invariably ignore my grandmother's admonitions, come up with some excuse (that for some reason my parents would not let me use) to skip some of the tasks, and win the 5p from my parents most mornings. It was ceremoniously dropped into his money box most mornings before we left for school.
When I complained to my grandmother that he was being rewarded for not following the rules, she said that there was something more important than the 5p, which was the knowledge that you were doing the right thing and doing what you had been entrusted to do by your parents, even if your parents don't seem (from my perspective) to recognise or reward it, because learning the skill to forgo the 5p and value the feeling of doing the right thing will serve you better in the world than caring about the 5p.
That's abstract thinking - doing the right thing for a feeling rather than for recognition or a concrete reward - 5p per day for sweets (back when sweets could be bought for 1/2p) was a lot to forgo to a 5 year old. But she was right - the internal thoughts and feelings and the skills learned in being able to forgo the 5p were a better reward than the 5p.
I would say that the concept of the after-life that I interpret (e.g. from the Quran) is similar to that feeling or principle that my grandmother explained. That there can be more value in a feeling or an abstract principle than concrete rewards.
I agree - which is why the elites in societies have used all sorts of methods (not just religion) to keep the plebs in line, which often means working for the benefit of those in elite positions and ensuring that their elite position isn't challenged.
And with religions this has often involved appeal to higher authority - 'I know you are slaving away to keep me in the manner to which I am accustomed, but hey it isn't me whose making you do this, it's what god wants'. And also the dangling of the promise of an afterlife - 'if you do what you are told (i.e. what I have said god wants you to do), you'll have paradise when you die, even though your current life is awful and benefits me'.
My understanding of religion is that you learn that you can't control outcomes - the circumstances of your life can be crap and you can try to change your circumstances but there are too many variables beyond your control that will impact the outcome - but you have more control over abstract concepts like your intentions and motivations.
My experience is that I sense/ experience some reward from such abstract concepts. There is reward from knowing you tried to oppose abstract concepts such as tyranny or injustice. It's up to individuals to ponder and decide where they direct their energies and what rewards they aim for.