The chart illustrates how consumer spending was distributed across five major sectors in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, and Japan in 2009.
Overall
, it is evident that food, housing, and transportation consumed the largest shares of household budgets in all four nations, Linking Words
whereas
health care and clothing consistently represented the smallest proportions.
A closer look shows that housing accounted for the greatest share of expenditure in both the United States and the United Kingdom, standing at just over 25% and approximately 24% respectively. The United States Linking Words
also
recorded the highest spending on health care, at nearly 7%, which was noticeably higher than that of the other countries.
Linking Words
In contrast
, Japan allocated the largest proportion of its budget to food, at around 23%, surpassing the other three nations. Meanwhile, Canada spent the most on transportation, with Linking Words
this
category reaching nearly 20%, slightly higher than the figures reported for the remaining countries.
Linking Words
By comparison
, both health care and clothing represented minimal portions of national expenditure, each category remaining below 5% across all four Linking Words
nation
Fix the agreement mistake
nations