The pie charts display 4 sectors of employment which are manufacturing, hospitality, engineering and teaching between 2009 and 2020, in two different towns, town A and town B.
At first glance, it is evident that in town A, there was a significant rise in manufacturing employment, while town B experienced a decline in the same sector.
Taking a closer look, there was a huge drop in number of employments in the engineering sector in town A, initially the figures showed 60% in 2000, but later reduced to just 17% in 2020. Whereas the engineering sector in town B remained stable at 35% across both years. Additionally, town A saw a 1% decrease in the teaching sector. In contrast to hospitality sector which had a slight increase of 4%. In town B, teaching sector grew to 20% from 10% and the hospitality also rose to 20% from 15%.
Overall, Town A had a major increase in employment in the manufacturing sector, compared to engineering sector which experienced a dramatic decline. Teaching employment shrank by 1%, while hospitality experienced minute growth. In town B, although manufacturing sector’s figures fell. There was a minor growth in teaching and hospitality sector, while the number of people employed for engineering remained constant for both years.
