Well, no. It just doesn't work that way. And it never will.
There have been plenty of company executives who wanted it to work that way. They spent huge amounts of money on "code generator" products that promised exactly what you propose. All for naught.
Every decade or so a new generation of executives (and investors) will fall for the same pitches about a new miracle product. As P.T Barnum said, "There is a sucker born every minute."
"Tell me lies, tell me sweet little lies" (Fleetwood Mac)
Well, I've been around the block a couple of times over my 67 years and have heard this a couple of times. What is needed is an incentive. When Kennedy said we were going to the moon and back, we really didn't have a rocket that was reliable for a monkey. To compare the Mercury to the Saturn 5 just shows what can be done if we set out minds to it. We have apple harvesters now even if they don't get every apple,, it's cheaper than labor. Picking strawberries was supposed to be the holy grail to get the ones that were ripe and not squash everything around it. Now we can go to a restaurant and have a machine cook and assemble a burger. You had to know when they cried out for $15 an hour, the inventors went to work. Why invent a machine to make burgers at $12 when you can pay a person $7.25?
Now we have a shortage of coders and the pay is waaaay high. The H1-B program is full politically, so the way code is written will have to evolve even if it's just piecemeal. We have self driving cars and even scarier 18 wheelers. I wouldn't buy a self driver, wouldn't rent a Lyft with no driver, but you have to admit, it's coming, and coming fast.
Someone will see the need and start to streamline coding, maybe even a new language soon. If you look at it from an employer view, If I could cut from 100 coders to 30, it would be done tomorrow. You may just have to clean up obvious errors the machine made for final approval. Have you heard of AI lately? Teaching a robot to code should be relatively easy today. Writing code, eliminating errors, and making code more streamlined could be done at breakneck speed with a Beowulf server running Terabytes per second. When it become more profitable to do it differently, it will be done more cheaply. If China were to gain advantage over the US, there would be an incentive to spend money on such a project. A small timer probably won't be the one to do it. Saying "Never" is a long time. I look at polio, AIDS, Hepatitis, and many other impossible mountains to move just in my life time, I have no doubt someone is working on it right now.