Every native Windows programs contains at least one message loop (often called a "message pump") like the one you give an example of.
This is to enable the handling of Windows events initiated by the program itself, other applications or the operating system.
Example of Windows events can be for timers, socket communication, GUI actions, clipboard, etc.
Many APIs and frameworks implement a message loop for you. This will depend on what you are using in your particular case.
(Check the answers in this Stack Overflow question for more information on message loops/message pump.)
Now to the gist of your question: many or most programs will work fine with one message-loop. The cases where you would want more than one is typically if processing a Windows event can take a long time (i.e. it locks the current thread) and there are requirements that require you too keep processing new window events. I can think of two concrete examples:
- One is in a GUI application where you're showing a modal dialog (which usually freezes the main message pump and spins up a new one for the dialog)
- A service of some kind where processing of I/O events can take a long time because of external dependencies and timeliness of processing of new I/O events is critical
In (1) this is very often a consequence of the GUI framework you are using and not something you have to do explicitly. In (2) a better way of handling it would be to asynchronously "do the work" of each event rather than blocking the message pump.
In conclusion: it depends. :-) In most cases you shouldn't need to use more than one message loop, but if you have to, do it!