The bar charts illustrate the age at which individuals completed full-time education and their corresponding average salaries two years after entering employment.
The pie chart reveals that the majority of people (54%) left education between 19 and 21. A significant proportion (19%) educated until 22 to 24 years old, whereas only a minority exists 3%, 6% left education before 16 and after 24 years old, respectively, however the third most common between 16 to 18 age group to discontinue them educate (18%). Therefore, only a small percentage (3%) remained in education beyond 24, indicating that prolonged academic pursuits are uncommon.
The bar charts present between educational duration and earnings after 2 years. The group leaving education before 16 years earned the least (8,000 pounds), while individuals studying until 16 to 18 or 19 to 21 had higher salaries (16,000 and 20,000 pounds, respectively). The highest salaries were those who left between 20 and 24 (24,000 pound), after that, the age group between 19 and 21, as well as those aged over 24, earned nearly identical salaries, with individuals over 24 receiving approximately 23,000 pounds.
In summary, most people finish education at 19-21, but those who study longer—particularly beyond 22 to 24 are achieve significantly higher early-career salaries.
