The line chart illustrates the criminal conviction rate in the UK by gender and age, while the pie chart demonstrates the distribution of prisoners by gender. Overall, males are more prone to committing crimes than females across all age groups, with a far greater absolute number of convicted inmates.
The trend of criminal convictions in different age groups for males is akin to that of females. The conviction rate for females is negligible for the 10-year-old group, whereas males of the same age also show a minimal rate of convictions of merely 2%. However, the percentage for both climbs and reaches a peak for the 20-year-old group. The conviction rate for males soars to 16%, representing an eightfold increment, while the rate for females increases to approximately 5%. A downward trend is presented thereafter from age 20 to 60, with the conviction rates of males and females steadily declining from 16% to 2% and from 5% to around 0%, respectively.
The pie chart shows a dominant proportion of male inmates in the UK compared to females, who only represent 4% of the total prisoners.
