The line chart compares numbers of migrants from countryside to city areas in three countries from 2000-2025. The overall trend increases in all three countries over the period of 25 years with different growth rates.
The data shows that at the start of the period, people in country A moved from countryside to city areas the most followed by country B and C, respectively. Country A and Country C both have distinctive rises. Country A consistently increased in the first 10 years, and sharply soared after that. Whereas Country C started off at the lowest point and slightly increased during 2000-2005. They significantly grew and reached the same number of 80 million people by the year 2000. Then, country C is predicted to rise sharper than country A and hit a peak above 90 million people at the end, while growth in country A is projected to be around 87 million people.
On the other hand, numbers of people moving in country B gradually climb from approximately 10 million people in 2000 to 30 million people in 2020. It can be seen that country B is predicted to remain steady for the last five years of the period given.
To conclude, the graph indicates that the number of people’s migration from rural to urban areas escalated across the period. Country A had quite a significant rise with an abrupt increase at the mid-period. Whereas, country B has progressively climbed, and stable at the end. Country C, although starting with the lowest numbers, seems to become the highest of all.
