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The image is a bar graph titled "Distribution of Income Groups in Cities and Regional Centres of Australia," showing the percentage of population for three average yearly income groups: Low ($40,000 or less), Lower middle ($40,000-$70,000), Middle ($70,000-$120,000), and High ($120,000 or more). The categories are divided into 'Cities' and 'Regional centres.' In cities, the Low income group accounts for approximately 10%, Lower middle for 20%, Middle for 30%, and High for around 25%. In regional centres, the Low income group is roughly 27.5%, Lower middle 32.5%, Middle 22.5%, and High about 17.5%. The percentages are depicted in four bars, each representing a different income group, with the y-axis ranging from 0% to 35%.
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The bar chart illustrates the proportion of people in four different income categories in cities and regional centers of Australia.
Overall, while most people in cities fall under the middle-income level, people in regional centers fall under the lower-middle-income range category. In both regions, the lower-middle and middle-income range categories are the most populated.
In cities, the majority of people, at 35%, earn between $70,000 and $120,000, while those earning less than $40,000 account for only 13%, making it the least populated category. People in the lower-middle-income range accounted for 30%, which is the second-highest category of population in cities. People earning above $120,000 accounted for 20%.
In regional centers, approximately 34% of people’s earnings are between $40,000 and $70,000, making it the most populated group, while high-income people account for 15%, making it the least populated group. The middle-income range is the second-most populated group at 26%. Lower-income people accounted for 22%.
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