The chart below shows the percentage of households in owned and rented accomodation in England and Wales between 1918 and 2011. Summarise the information by selecting and reporting the main features, and make comparisons where relevant.

The chart below shows the percentage of households in owned and rented accomodation in England and Wales between 1918 and 2011. Summarise the information by selecting and reporting the main features, and make comparisons where relevant.
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A glance at a bar chart provided reveals the figures for accommodations owned and rented by residents in England and Wales, measured in per cent, between 1918 and 2011. There was a recessive growth pattern witnessed in rented accommodation starting at 77% in 1918 before having a slight deterioration to merely 67% in 1939 and there was no response detecting any rises and falls in the rented housing from 1939 to 1953. After that, rented accommodation experienced a dramatic decrease and plunged into its trough at merely 30% in 2011 before witnessing a slight hike to 35% during the rest of the period. The residents of owned housing witnessed an upward trend starting in the vicinity of 23% in 1918 and went up to merely 32%, after that it stay unchanged for two years 1939 and 1953 before having a significant hike and standing at approximately 70%, which was
also
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its peak before decreasing to 64%
at the end
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of the period. Especially, in 1971 had the same number of households owning and renting accommodation.
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Sentences: Add more complex sentences.
Vocabulary: The word "slight" was used 2 times.
Topic Vocabulary:
  • predominant
  • accommodation
  • trend
  • shift
  • households
  • homeownership
  • economic and social circumstances
  • interwar period
  • post-World War II
  • government policies
  • urbanization
  • public policy
  • economic prosperity
  • tipping point
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