The provided illustration of the bar chart does demonstrate some information about the mean expenditure by families every week in 1968 and after 50 years, in 2018. Units of measurement are in percentages.
A glance at the graph reveals that an income was mostly distributed for food, housing, and leisure in both years, while the least common were personal goods, fuel, and power.
It is conspicuous that families used to spend a bit more than two times more money for food in 1968 than in 2018, approximately 35 and 17 percents respectively. Moreover, there was an increasing tendency to allocate more for leisure, transport, and housing, nearly 14, 6, and 8 percents in turn. Furthermore, the need for personal goods, fuel and power, and for clothing and footwear have witnessed a dramatic decline, whilse for household goods, it remained steady over the period of half a century.
