The bar chart compares revenue generated from sales of five goods sectors in the United Kingdom in 2015, divided into four seasons. In general, winter was the most popular season for purchasing clothing, electrical equipment, and children’s toys, while spring saw the highest sales of gardening tools and household appliances, with clothing being the best-selling category all year. Furthermore, the greatest variation was observed during the winter.
Clothing remained the most purchased item in 2015, with the highest revenue recorded in winter, at 110,000 pounds, and the lowest in summer and autumn, at 70,000 to 80,000 pounds. Despite ranking second in the first three seasons, UK consumers were less likely to spend on household appliances toward the end of the year, with sales falling from 80,000 pounds in spring to 50,000 pounds in winter.
Only 20,000 to 40,000 pounds were allocated to children’s toys, making it the lowest selling item throughout the year except during the cold season, when it increased by a factor of two to 60,000 pounds. In contrast, there were few changes in purchases of electrical equipment and gardening products during the first three seasons, hovering around 50,000 and 40,000 pounds, respectively, before a remarkable increase to 80,000 pounds was witnessed for the former, as opposed to a fifty percent decrease to 20,000 pounds for the latter, which was four times less and ranked last in winter.
