The bar graph depicts the proportion of British people donating for the charity sorted by age group in 1990 and 2010. The data are taken from the age of 18 to above 65 which varied from the scale of 0 to 45 percent. Overall, the charts delineate a fluctuating pattern in both years.
From the information given, young adults held the lowest percentage of charity in both 1990 and 2010, at approximately 17%, before collapsing just to about 7%. The same trend also occurred for early adults and early middle-aged individuals which declined at around 7%. For the age range of 26-35, the proportion went down from about 31% to near a quarter. Meanwhile, for people who belong to the age group of 36-50, the percentage dropped from 42% to exactly 35%.
Conversely, citizens who aged 51 or above generally donated more in 2010 compared to those 10 years ago. The proportion of people who were in their midlife climbed from 35% to just under 40%, while the philanthropist percentage at golden age rose from 32% to 35%.
