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The image presents a bar chart comparing average weekly spending by families in percentages of weekly income on different categories for the years 1968 and 2018. In 1968, the expenditure percentages for various categories are as follows: Food (approximately 23%), Housing (roughly 7%), Fuel and power (close to 5%), Clothing and footwear (about 8%), Household goods (nearly 4%), Personal goods (around 2%), Transport (just over 5%), and Leisure (slightly more than 2%). For the year 2018, the spending percentages for the same categories are: Food (approximately 8%), Housing (about 30%), Fuel and power (close to 2%), Clothing and footwear (around 3%), Household goods (nearly 3%), Personal goods (approximately 3%), Transport (about 15%), and Leisure (roughly 10%). The chart illustrates a significant decrease in the percentage of income spent on food, fuel, and power from 1968 to 2018, with an increase in spending on housing, transport, and leisure in the same period.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The bar chart illustrate how families in one nation spent their weekly income in the years 1968 and 2018. The units are measured in percentages.
Overall, in 1968 the highest expenditure of families was on Food accounted for 35 percent and in 2018 families spent around 6 per cent on Fuel and Power. However, in 2018 families almost of their income went to Leisure with 22%, while the lowest spent on Fuel and Personal goods.
According to what is shown Foods in both years had high number at 18% and 35% respectively. in 2018 most of people concentrate on Housing at almost 20 percent while in 1968 families just spent 10 per cent. Transportaion and leisure in 2018 around 14% and 22% meanwhile, in the other year families expenditure was 8 percent and 9 percent.
In terms of Household goods both years spent the same number, which is 8%, but in other sectors had flctuated numbers Fuel and power just 4% and 6% respectively. and Clothing was in 1968 at 10% and in 2018 accounted for just 5%. Therefore, personal goods in 1968 nearly 10 percent. On the other hand in 2018 at just only 4 percent.
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