The bar chart shows how European country households spent their weekly income in 1990 and in 2020. The bar chart has two indicators. First, is %, second, is parts of life. Seven parts consist of entertainment, personal care, clothing, transportation, groceries, utilities, and rent and housing costs.
Let us start with entertainment. In 1990, the weekly income score was 10%. That index in 2020 was lower than it was, by 2–3%. The personal care mark in 1990 was also higher than in 2020, but not by much. However, the clothing households’ weekly spending index in 1990 was 15%. This was more than in 2020. After 30 years, the mark was only 5%. Transportation in 1990 was 6–7%. Thirty years ago, the indicator grew by 3–4%. The most change in the bar chart was in groceries. The 30-year index was lower by 12%. Weekly spending on utilities and rent and housing costs grew after 30 years. Utilities were 5% more than they were in 1990; rent and housing costs were 15% more than before, according to the bar chart.
The bar chart gives us information about household weekly spending in a European country over a 30-year period.
