The bar chart provides data on the amount of money given to developing countries by five different organizations over a period of five years.
Overall, while both Organization 1 and Organization 2 showed upward trends, the opposite was true for Organization 3 and Organization 4. In addition, there was a notable feature that the same number was recorded only for Organization 5 in the third year. Organization 2 reached the highest amounts in the last two years.
Focusing on the first two organizations, the former started at a level just above 0.5 billion dollars. After growing slowly, it experienced a minimal fall and then remained roughly the same at around 600 million dollars during the last two years. The latter showed higher amounts of money at just under 1.5 billion dollars compared to the former, and later reached the highest level of around 2 billion dollars in the final two-year period.
In contrast, downward trends were observed for the third and fourth organizations. Initially, Organization 3 stood just below 700 million dollars. After declining slowly in 2009, the figure showed a minimal increase, reaching exactly 0.5 billion dollars the following year. Organization 4 experienced continuous decline over the four-year period. Although it stood just above 1 billion dollars in 2005, the figure fell significantly, reaching a bit under 500 million dollars.
Despite starting at the highest level of exactly 1.5 billion dollars, Organization 5 fluctuated over the period and ended at the same level in the final year.
