The given bar chart illustrates the comparison of people’s living costs in different parts. The graph shows the expense of living in eight items, including meals, housing and leisure. Generally, what stands out from the
The given chart illustrates how families’ salaries have been spent on some facilities every week in one country, and it is compared two years (1968 and 2018).
The graph demonstrates the average weekly spending of families on food, housing, fuel and power, clothing and footwear, household goods, personal goods, transport and leisure in one country in 2 different years.
The given graph illustrates the percentage of weekly budget that families in one country spent on eight various parts of life in 1968 and 2018. Overall, in 1968 the most amount of money people spent on food, while the le
The bar chart illustrates the percentage of weekly income that families spent on different categories in a specific city during the years 1968 and 2018.
The bar chart below informs about the weekly income spending of families in a country in 1968 and 2018. The three most items bought were food, housing, clothing and footwear in 1968. Fifty years later, families were most
The information about the income and expenditure of families in one particular nation in 1968 and in 2018 is depicted by the given bar graph. The information is calibrated in the form of percentage.
The bar chart illustrates data about what families spend their weekly income on for a duration of two time periods; 1968 and 2018, which is broken down into eight categories. Overall, it is evident that the majority of i