The pie chart and line graph present three kinds of the workforce in London and variations of the unemployment rate within three groups over a decade.
Overall, native Londoners constitute the largest proportion while English-speaking people are the minority. In addition, along with the lowest percentage, English-speaking people exhibited the highest unemployment rate while non-English-speaking people occupied the lowest rate. There were lots of differences in growth trajectory but all demonstrated a decline over the period.
Examining the data in detail, the most proportion of the workforce was occupied by native Londoner, with 50%. Followed by non-English-speaking people at 42%. Meanwhile, English-speaking people contributed to a mere 8% of the workforce. Looking at the line chart, the employment rate of non-English-speaking people was always the lowest , commencing at 3% in 1993 and after ten years of stable decrease, reaching 1% in 2003. In contrast, the equivalent number for English-spenking people was the highest consistently over the period which was nearly 8% at the start and dropped dramatically to 3% in 2003. The unemployment rate of native Londoners experienced a fluctuation, commencing at 4% in 1993 before ascending to 5% several years later and decreased to 2% in 2003.
