The given two pie charts provides information about the proportion 2 different family income per month allocated on range of items in on one European country.
Overall, it is clear that both groups spent their revenue for different items. While low incomers allocated their primary salaries for necessary things such food and drink, high income holders used their household income for non-essential items like recreation and miscellaneous.
In the low group, food and drink represented the biggest figure, at 29%, followed by fuel bills at 24%. By comparison, spending income on recreation and miscellaneous was relatively low, at 11% and 18% respectively. Other categories such as transport made up 9%, while restaurant/hotel and clothing accounted for 4% and 5% correspondingly.
In contrast, when it comes to individuals with high salaries allocated their revenue on different things. Miscellaneous took the largest part of their income, at 23%, while recreation/culture surpassed food and drink, sharing 21%. Food and drink accounted for 15%, followed by fuel bills at 7%. Spending on transport(16%) and restaurant/hotel(12%) was also noticeably higher, and clothing accounted for merely 6%.
