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澳父親50箱啤酒換兒子一份工作

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澳大利亞昆士蘭州的一位父親近日打出廣告,稱如果有人願意收他兒子做電氣工學徒,他將免費爲其提供50箱啤酒。這位父親表示,他和兒子之前已經投遞了很多份簡歷,但都沒有任何迴音,他認爲用這些啤酒作爲對兒子未來的投資很值得。據悉,他的兒子之前一直與母親在丹麥生活,因爲丹麥經濟不景氣才於5個月前回到澳大利亞找工作。目前,有不少人對免費啤酒廣告表示興趣,但還沒有人真正願意提供工作。這位父親說:“如果這招都不管用,我就不知道還有什麼辦法管用了。”

A Queensland father is offering a year's supply of beer to anyone who will employ his 19-year-old son as an electrical apprentice.

It is not the average "employment wanted" advertisement.

澳父親50箱啤酒換兒子一份工作

It reads: "Free beer - one year's supply. Fifty cartons in exchange for electrical apprenticeship for my 19-year-old son. Local, hardworking, reliable, desperate, not a quitter."

It then provides the mobile numbers before finishing up, "Legitimate offer, no BS."

The ad was placed by Paul McVeigh, a desperate Mackay dad.

"We put out a few resumes and didn't have any feedback. I actually didn't think it was such a big deal," he said.

"Just come up with the idea and thought it was a bit of a laugh and see what would happen and it's only a couple of grands worth of beer. I think it's a worthy investment in your son's future."

His son is Nick McVeigh, who had been living with his mother in Denmark until five months ago.

"I was just trying to get started with a trade but the Danish economy is a bit different at the moment so I gave Australia a shot," he said.

So far, the McVeighs have not had much luck.

"We've been around and we haven't found anything so far. I've showed up at stores in person and still nothing. Sent out resumes to more than 100 places at least, all over Queensland," Nick said.

Paul McVeigh is a fitter and turner in the mines. He says it is not as easy to find work, despite the resources boom.

"It's a very competitive industry of course. It depends on where you live and if you're willing to travel and it's a different life in the mines," he said.

"It is a lot harder than you think."

Not thirsty?

The offer of free beer has not exactly impressed one local business.

Christine Bower is the office manager at A Plus Electrical and Air conditioning in Mackay. She says Paul McVeigh walked into her office with the offer recently.

"And I just threw that resume straight in the bin because I feel as though his son should have come in with his dad and I don't believe that the dad should have to do all the running around to get his son a job," she said.

But Paul says his son has been doing plenty of job hunting

"We both ran around handing out leaflets the other day," he said.

The campaign is reminiscent of the jobless Irish graduate who last year spent his life savings on a billboard asking prospective employers to "save him from emigration".

And just like Ireland, there has been a lot of interest in the offer of free beer.

Paul says there has been a lot of interest, but he just hopes it turns into a job.

"If this doesn't work I don't know what will," he said.