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Cambridge IELTS 18 Academic Writing Test 2 (Task 1)

Part 1
You should spend about 20 minutes on this task. Write at least 150 words.

The chart below shows the number of households in the US by their annual ’ income in 2007, 2011 and 2015.

Summarise the information by selecting and reporting the main features, and make comparisons where relevant.

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Part 1
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29 comments on “Cambridge IELTS 18 Academic Writing Test 2 (Task 1)”

  1. Kamana Poudel says:

    Band 6.5
    The given chart illustrates the yearly income of a number of families of US citizens in three different years: 2007, 2011, and 2015. The number of homes counted in millions, whereas income in $. 

    Overall, the highest income was recorded in 2015, while the lowest was in 2011. Moreover, above 20 million households in all 3 years recorded the same range of yearly income. 

    In 2007, 25 million families had an income of less than $25,000, which rose slightly to around 29 million, and ended up around 28 million in 2015. Exploring the families whose income range was $25,000-$49,000, approximately 27 million households had that range of earnings in 2007, which further increased to nearly 30 million in 2011 and declined slightly again to about 28 million in 2015. The homes around 33 million that have $100,000 or more at the end of the period were about 27 million and 29 million in 2011 and 2007, respectively. 

    Now, addressing the range of income $50,000-$74,999, the data remained constant over the period of time for around 21 million houses. Furthermore, the $75,000-$99,999 range, which recorded the lowest earnings, had about 15 million in earnings across all three years. 

  2. Artha says:

    BAND 8.0
    The chart below illustrates the proportion of households by their annual income in the US between 2007, 2011, and 2015.

    Overall, households with an income of $100,000 or more remained the highest proportion, while the income in the range of $75,000-$99,000 showed the lowest trend over the period.

    It can be seen that households with an income of $100,000 or more accounted for the highest proportion approximately 30 million, then slightly diminished in 2011 to around 27 million, before it continued to the highest level in 2015 at around 33 million. Additionally, in 2007, people with an income of $25,000-$49,999 depicted the second highest trend, which accounted for around 26 million, then slightly grew to 30 million in 2011. In 2015, it decreased to approximately 28 million households. Moreover, people with income less than $25,000 increased from 25 million in 2007, to approximately 29 million in 2011, then decreased to around 28 million at the end of the period.

    In addition, people with income $75,000-$99,000 remained the lowest proportion at about 15 million in 2007, then declined to around 14 million before it rose back to 15 million in 2015. Moreover, the $50,000-$74,999 income category remained stable at about 21 million over the period.

  3. aida says:

    i wrote “millions” everywhere, and because of this, i got 6.0, (+ other punctual mistakes) however removing “S”, it became 7.0

  4. andre contas says:

    band 8.5
    The bar chart provided above represents the evolution of US household annual income categories in 2007, 2011, and 2015. The illustration depicts five different categories that range from less than $25,000 to more than $100,000.

    Overall, most US households had an annual income of more than $100,000 throughout the measured period. American families that earned between $75,000 and $100,000 were the least represented in the data.

    Firstly, households that earned from $75,000 to $100,000 were the least frequent level, maintaining a percentage value of around 14 million in the three measured years. The level of $50,000 to $75,000 was the second least frequent category, also fluctuating around 21 million mark.

    Secondly, America saw an increase in the number of families who earned $100,000 or more. This income bracket went from 29 million families to close to 33 million families in 2015. Furthermore, the last two income brackets experienced a similar trend: while the less than $25,000 bracket fluctuated between 25 and 28 million families, the $25,000 to $50,000 level plateaued in the range of 28 million American families.

  5. Ariel Asyraaf says:

    The chart illustrates the quantity of households in the US by their annual income in 2007, 2011 and 2015. Each of the annual income are categorized into five different types which are ranging from less than $25,000 into $100,000 or more, the number of households are count in millions.

    Overall, the highest annual income of $100,000 or more are in year 2015 which far exceeds the others and around 33 millions households and the lowest annual income of $100,00 or more are in year 2011 which drops a bit from the year 2007. Furthermore, the highest annual income of less than $25,000 are in year 2011 which is increasing from the lowest annual income of less than $25,000 in previous categorized year of 2007.

    In conclusion, the highest annual income are steadily increasing over the years and goes upwards even more in the recent categorized year of 2015 in the US households.

  6. ibrahim kalani says:

    The given bar chart illustrates the number of households in the United States of America, divided by their annual income, in 3 years: 2007, 2011, and 2015. Overall, there are 3 interesting trends experienced by these income groups: a valley-like trend, a hill-like trend, and a stagnant trend. The groups which went through a valley-like trend are the over 100k and 75k-99k groups. The 100k category started out just below 30 million in 2007, then sloped down slightly to approximately 27 million by 2011, then jumped back to a little bit over 32 million as its peak by the end of the period. The same movement happened to the 75k-99k group; however, the scale is much smaller, with the movement still inside the range of 12 million to 15 million. A hill-like trend was shown by the <25k and 25k-49k groups. The <25k group started around 25 million, then peaked at approximately 28 million by 2011, then slightly decreased to around 27 million in 2015. The 25k-49k group experienced the same hill in 2011, which was its peak at almost 30 million from its initial state of around 24 million. In 2015, it finalized with approximately 27 million. The 50k-75k group experienced relatively no motion compared with other groups.

    1. Hellena Sailas says:

      You get how much band ?

  7. Umida Alimova says:

    The provided chart illustrates the number of households in the US and their income per year, encompassing the period from 2007 to 2015.

    Overall, it is clearly seen that four categories experienced increase over the period of time, whereas the other remained stable. In addition, the category ‘$100,000 or more’ recorded the highest figures, while the category ‘$75,000-$99,999’ consistently had the lowest values.

    The ‘less than $25,000’ category underwent a slight increase from 25 million in 2007 to 27 million by 2015, followed closely by the ‘$25,000-$49,999’ category at 27 million households at the beginning of the period, rising to about 29 million. The most considerable increase happened in the ‘$100,000 or more’ category, with almost 30 million householders initially, reaching its peak in 2015 at 33 million.

    Following this, the ‘$75,000-$99,999’ category slightly rose from 14,5 million to 15 million by the end of the time frame. Meanwhile, the ‘$50,000-74,999’ category remained unchanged at 20 million householders.

  8. zeynep sude genç says:

    The bar chart illustrates how the number of houselholds in the UK varied according to their yearly income levels in 2007, 2011, and 2015, measured in millions.

    Overall, it is evident that those with the lower and middle income groups experienced only some fluctuations over the period, whereas the higher income category illustrated a huge rise at the end of the period.

    Examining the data in detail, both the less than $25,000 and $25,000-$49,999 income groups experienced a slight increase from 25 millions and just over 25 million in 2007 to just under 30 million and 30 million in 2011, before declining again in 2015. The middle-income segments, earning between $50,000 and $75,000, remained unchanged at approximately 20 million throughout the period.

    Regarding higher income groups, earning above $100,000, showed a substantial rise from 25,000 million to over 30 million between 2011 and 2015, after decreasing modestly in 2007 to 2011. Finally, the smallest sector was families with $75,000-$99,999 earnings, which stood at less than 15 million, and only in 2015 was able to be a 15 million households.

  9. Oleksandr Shkoda says:

    The bar graph illustrates the number of households by their annual income in 2007, 2011, and 2015.

    Overall, it is clear that people who have more than $100,000 reached the highest figures throughout the period, this type of household experienced a slight fluctuation. At the same time, people who have $75,000-$99,999 remained stable over the same period and reached the lowest position.

    At the beginning of the period, residents who had less than $25,000 accounted for 25 million, and the number slightly increased in 2011 then experienced a slight decline in 2015. Households with $25,000-$49,999 had the same situation over the period.

    In comparison, individuals who had $50,000-$74,999 and more than $100,000 remained relatively stable during 8 years. By 2015, the leadership have individuals with $100,000 and more consequently citizens with $25,000-$49,999 were slightly above people with less than $25,000, and $50,000-74,999 with $75,000-$99,999 reached the fourth and fifth place.

  10. SIAM says:

    The bar chart details the total number of households in the United States categorized by average annual income from the year 2007 to 2015. Looking from an overall perspective, it is readily apparent that there were rising trends for all income brackets with the exception of those earning in the middle, which was stable. The greatest increase and the highest proportion by the end belonged to those earning the most.

    In 2007, those with annual compensations under $25,000 numbered just over 25 million, a figure considerably higher than $50,000-$74,999 (21 million) and $75,000-99,999 (14 million) but beneath those earning $25,000-$49,999 (27 million) and over $100,000 (29 million). Four years later, there was a decline for the wealthiest homes to 26 million, the next wealthiest to 14 million and noticeable rises of around 3 million for the lower income brackets. Only the middle-income group was unchanged throughout the surveyed time period.

    By 2015, the number of very wealthy households had surged to 33 million while the two lowest earning demographics fell slightly by about a million each to finish around 26 million. There was a moderate rise for the second highest earning households to end the period at precisely 15 million in total.

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