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The image contains a bar graph with two sets of bars for each category, denoting data for the years 2010 and 2014, measured in $ Million, with a scale from 0 to 5000. The categories are Food, Clothes, Books, Smartphones, and Toiletries. In 2010, Food accounted for approximately 4500 $ Million, Clothes 1500 $ Million, Books 500 $ Million, Smartphones 2500 $ Million, and Toiletries 1000 $ Million. In 2014, Food accounted for nearly 4000 $ Million, Clothes 2000 $ Million, Books 1000 $ Million, Smartphones 3000 $ Million, and Toiletries just below 1500 $ Million. The bars for 2014 are consistently taller than their 2010 counterparts, except for Food which decreased.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The provided chart delineates the expenditure per family on five distinct product categories in the United States during the years 2010 and 2014.
Broadly speaking, expenditures increased notably for food, smartphones, and toiletries, whereas a precipitous decline was observed in book investments. Concurrently, expenditures on clothing exhibited a consistent trend, showing no discernible changes during the specified period.
Household spending on food commenced at approximately $3600 million in 2010 and experienced a substantial escalation to $4400 million by 2014. Similar patterns, albeit to a lesser degree, were witnessed in expenditures for smartphones and toiletries, which surged from $2000 million to $2600 million and $1800 million to $2000 million, respectively.
Conversely, expenditures on books dwindled from $1000 million in 2010 to approximately $500 million by 2014. Meanwhile, clothing expenditures remained stagnant at $2500 million in both years.
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