The bar chart illustrates information regarding the amount of money spent on five consumer goods (e.g. cars, computers, books, perfumes, and cameras) in Britain in 2010.
Overall, it is evident that cars record the highest expenditure, whereas perfumes account for the lowest. Additionally, there was a subtantial gap between spending on cars and the remaining consumer goods.
Looking first at the highest figures, expenditure on cars ranked first, recording approximately 450000 pounds. This was followed by spending on books, which stood at around 400000 pounds. The figure for computers was slightly lower at 380000 pounds. Together, these categories accounted for the largest share of total.
Turning to the remaining categories, money spending on cameras registered 350000 pounds, while spending on perfumes recorded only 200000 pounds. Despite some variation among these groups, their figures were considerably lower than those of the leading consumer goods e.g. cars. Notably, the gap between expenditure on cars and perfumes amounted to approximately 250000 pounds.
