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The image presents a bar chart detailing percentage shares of expenditures for food, housing, transportation, healthcare, and clothing in 2009. In the United States, food accounts for 15%, housing 25%, transportation approximately 17%, healthcare over 20%, and clothing around 5%. Canada's food expenditure is roughly 17%, housing 27%, transportation 20%, healthcare under 5%, and clothing at 5%. The United Kingdom shows food at 17%, housing over 20%, transportation 15%, healthcare at 5%, and clothing 5%. Japan's food expenditure is nearly 25%, housing at 20%, transportation over 10%, healthcare around 5%, and clothing at 5%.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The bar chart illustrates how five distinct categories were represented through expenditures in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, and Japan in 2009.
Well over half of the expenditures went to housing in the US, around 4% higher than the figure for Japan, which was around 22%. While the trend was the same for transportation and healthcare, the opposite was true for food, with below 15% and 23% for the US and Japan respectively. In contrast, there was just nearly 5% of spendings were paid on clothing.
Looking at the chart in more detail, housing accounted for the highest proportion of UK and Canadian spendings, with roundly 25% and 21% respectively. While the figure for Canadian citizens opting for food were significantly lower than that of the UK, the opposite pattern could be seen in transportation and healthcare. Regarding the remaining category, the proportions of these two countries were relatively similar, with around 5%.
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