The bar graph provides statistical data on the percentage of British people who donate money to charities based on their age ranges for two years, 1990 and 2010. Summarise the information by selecting and reporting the main features, and make comparisons where relevant.

The bar chart compares the percentages of British residents in various age brackets who donated money to charities in 1990 and 2010. In general, participation in charitable giving was more common among middle-aged and older adults,
whereas
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younger segments contributed far less. Over the period, a downward pattern can be seen among the younger population,
in contrast
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to a steady rise among older age categories. In 1990, the share of donors increased progressively with age, peaking at just over 40% among those aged 36–50.
By comparison
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, the youngest category (18–25) recorded the smallest proportion, at about 17%. The 51–65 bracket placed
second,
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making up roughly 35% of contributors. Meanwhile, those aged 26–35 and individuals aged over 65 showed comparable rates, both remaining marginally above 30%. By 2010, the distribution had changed noticeably. The rate of giving dropped sharply among younger people, especially those aged 18–25, whose level fell to approximately 6%.
Nevertheless
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, older adults experienced an upward movement, with the 51–65 group reaching the highest level at just under 40%. A similar grow was evident among the over-65 category, whose rate rose to around 35%, as opposed to the middle-aged segment saw a slight reduction during
this
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period.

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