The given bar chart demonstrates the amount of money spent on different types of fast food, namely hamburger, fish&chips, and pizza, by three distinct income cohorts in the UK in 1990.
Overall, while hamburger was the most ingested by the affluent residents in the UK, a reverse trajectory could be observed in the data on pizza consumed by low income citizens.
In 1990, the high paycheck bracket had expenditure on hamburgers accounting for the highest amount, at about 43 million dollars, followed by those who were in the middle class, at roughly 33 million dollars. Additionally, the poor allocated the least money to purchasing hamburgers, constituting nearly 15 million dollars.
In terms of buying fish and chips, the average income group had the highest budget on these items, at 25 million dollars. This was followed by the figures for the low paycheck and high remuneration cohort, at around 18 and 16 million dollars, respectively. Regarding pizza, approximately 20 million dollars were paid for that kind of food by the wealthy individuals, while the data on the middle-class inhabitants and the underprivileged were lower, at above 11 and 5 million dollars, in turn.
