Future down the drain as Indian grads apply for sanitation jobs
Daniel Teo
The future of young Indian graduates is being flushed down the drain – literally, as hundreds of them turned up to interview for district council sanitation worker jobs in Tamil Nadu, according to Tamil newspaper Makkal Osai.
There were 549 permanent positions for sanitation workers up for grabs but the interviewers were not expecting such over qualified applicants, with most of them holding diplomas and degrees.
But with jobs hard to come by, many graduates are desperate to land any job to help provide for their families.
And you can’t blame them.
Some of the graduates claim that engineering jobs in private companies are only offering salaries of about 10,000 to 12,000 rupees ($190 to $230) per month.
Daniel Teo
The future of young Indian graduates is being flushed down the drain – literally, as hundreds of them turned up to interview for district council sanitation worker jobs in Tamil Nadu, according to Tamil newspaper Makkal Osai.
There were 549 permanent positions for sanitation workers up for grabs but the interviewers were not expecting such over qualified applicants, with most of them holding diplomas and degrees.
But with jobs hard to come by, many graduates are desperate to land any job to help provide for their families.
And you can’t blame them.
Some of the graduates claim that engineering jobs in private companies are only offering salaries of about 10,000 to 12,000 rupees ($190 to $230) per month.