The bar chart compares the amount of money allocated to six types of charity – namely, social wellfare, education, environment, health, wildlife, and arts – by one company between 2012 and 2014.
Overall, throughout the period, the amount of money given to all categories witnessed a noticeable increase, apart from environment which observed a slight dip. However, social welfare was the only category which was given more donations compared to others, over the span.
Social welfare consistently made up the highest thousands of dollars in given donations, starting at just around $24,000 in 2012, this figure decline noticeably after a year to about $17,000. Despite this fall, it rebounded, increasing to nearly $25,000, recorded the highest figure of the other groups in question.
Education and environment almost exactly mirrored in their initial figures, given approximately $7,000 to each one before they declined slightly by about $3,000 in 2013. While these figures rebounded to almost $9,000 in 2014, the figure for health almost doubled from $5,000 in 2012 to nearly $10,000 in 2014.
As for the least donated groups, wildlife and arts, the former saw a slight rise from $2,000 in 2012 to almost $5,000 and the latter remained unchanged at $2,000, over the timeframe.
