The pie charts illustrate the sex-disaggregated data on three different sectors in two countries.
Overall, it is readily apparent that services is the major sector in both surveyed countries, and much more workforce engage in this sector in country B than in country A. In addition, country A’s labor force focuses more on agriculture while country B is more industrialized.
Looking first at the figures for male workers in both countries, most of the workforce is concentrated in services, and the percentage of workers in country B is higher than that of country A, at 65% and 56%, respectively. In addition, it is clear that the proportions of male workers in country A in agriculture in significantly larger than that of country B, with the former at 29%, almost ten times larger than the latter, at 3%. On the contrary, the numbers of male workers in the industry sectors in country B double the figure in country A, with the respective figures of 32% and 15%.
Moving to the remaining figures, services is also the major sector amongst female workers, and is especially common in country B, as 88% of them chose the sector, much higher than the figure in country B, at 49%. Moreover, despite being ranked the second largest sector in country A, with 43% of the total proportion of laborers working there, the figure in country B accounts for just 1%. The differences between the data in industry in both countries are less pronounced, with that in country A and country B ranging from 8% to 11%.
