The bar chart illustrates the annual mileage travelled by men and women in a particular country, categorized by six distinct purposes.
A significant disparity is evident between the genders across various travel categories. Men consistently travelled further than women for work, day trips, and entertainment. In contrast, women significantly exceeded men in mileage for shopping and transporting children to school, and also travelled a greater distance to meet friends. Work-related travel represents the highest mileage for both genders.
Specifically, men accumulated 15,000 miles for entertainment and 10,000 miles for day trips, considerably more than the 12,000 and 7,000 miles recorded for women respectively. While men’s work-related travel reached 35,000 miles, women’s totalled 30,000 miles. However, women’s shopping mileage (30,000 miles) equalled men’s work mileage, highlighting a notable contrast in travel priorities.
Further analysis reveals that women’s mileage for meeting friends (25,000 miles) and transporting children to school (27,000 miles) exceeded that of men (22,000 and 26,000 miles respectively). This underscores the differing travel patterns and responsibilities between genders within the given context.
