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The image contains a bar graph showing leisure time per week by sex and employment status for 1998-99; categories measured are employed full-time, employed part-time, unemployed, retired, and housewives, with separate bars for males and females within each category. Employed full-time males have around 40 hours of leisure time, females around 30; employed part-time males have approximately 75, females around 65; unemployed males and females both have about 85 hours; retired males have nearly 95, females around 90; housewives show around 50 hours with no male counterpart. The y-axis measures hours of leisure time from 0 to 100 in increments of 20, while the x-axis lists the employment status categories.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The bar chart compares the amount of free time per week that males and females of five categories of employment status had between 1998 and 1999.
It is clear that men enjoyed more hours of leisure time per week than women in three out of five categories. However, only figures for women are shown in two categories, namely employed part-time and housewives.
Regarding the full-time employed, obviously men had slightly more leisure time than women, with approximately 45 hours of free time per week, compared to around 38 hours for women. Obviously, unemployed and retired people of both genders enjoyed the most hours of leisure time. Moreover, the figures for retired males and females were exactly the same as those for the unemployed, at around 85 and 78 hours of free time per week, respectively.
Housewives enjoyed 50 hours of spare time, a little more than part-time working women who had just over 40 leisure hours each week. No data is given for men in either of these categories.
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