sinecure
noun·/ˈsaɪ.nɪˌkjʊr/
A position that provides income or status with little or no required work, an office whose burdens have been quietly removed. Sinecure implies disconnection between reward and labor, pay unmoored from obligation.
He treated the directorship as a sinecure, attending meetings the way one attends weather: present, but untouched.
Etymology
From Latin sine cura "without care," originally a church benefice without responsibility for the care of souls. The phrase migrated from ecclesiastical technicality into social critique. Comfort that requires no tending.
Related Words
beneficethe ecclesiastical ancestor of the concept
perquisitean extra benefit; sometimes adjacent
stipendpayment; neutral, without the judgment
deadwoodcolloquial label for those perceived to occupy sinecures