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The image contains two bar graphs. The first graph, titled "Happiness ratings: married and unmarried people" has four age group categories: 18-29, 30-49, 50-64, and 65 and over. For the 18-29 age group, 45% of married people and 21% of unmarried people reported happiness; for 30-49, the percentages are 44% married and 22% unmarried; for 50-64, they are 40% married and 21% unmarried; and for 65 and over, it's 44% married and 34% unmarried. The second graph, titled "Happiness ratings: married couples" only has one category: married. It shows 44% happiness rating for couples with children under 18, 41% for childfree-only couples, and 43% for couples with no children.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The two bar charts compare the happiness levels across couples and single individuals, and the children’s influence on married people.
Overall, it is clear that married people are far more content than unmarried ones. On the other hand, the happiest couples are those who have children under 18 years old.
In detail, couples in the 18-29 age group account for the highest level of happiness (45%), closely followed by the 30-49 and over 65 age groups, each representing 44% of the total. According to statistics, while approximately 35% of over-65-single people feel pleased, those between 18 and 64 remain a relatively stable rating of happiness, just more than 20%.
We can see that although there are slight differences in terms of couples with children’s happiness extents, teenagers’ parents experience the peak level of pleasure, with 44% out of 100%. The other two groups, couples with over 18 children and without children, constitute 41% and 43%, respectively.
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