The Daily Telegraph

85,000 apply for 30 bank jobs in Italy

- By Nick Squires in Rome

ITALY’S chronic unemployme­nt problem has been thrown into sharp relief after 85,000 people applied for 30 jobs at a bank – nearly 3,000 candidates for each post.

With youth unemployme­nt close to 40 per cent and the overall level at 11 per cent, steady jobs are in great demand. But managers at the Bank of Italy were still astounded by the huge number of people who contacted them.

The 30 junior jobs come with an annual salary of €28,000 (£25,000). The work is not glamorous – one duty is feeding cash into machines that can distinguis­h bank notes that are counterfei­t or so worn out they should no longer be in circulatio­n.

The high level of interest was a reflection of the state of the economy but also of the Italian obsession with securing “un posto fisso” – a permanent job. Rigid labour laws mean that once an employee is hired, it is hard for a company to get rid of them, no matter how incompeten­t they might be.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom