The two given charts give information about intended length of stay of immigrants to the UK from 2000 to 2008 and why people chose the UK for migration in 2008. While the line chart shows a stability of the number of people staying up to 2 years, the pie chart details that most people migrated for work.
Regarding a line graph, the most striking feature is that the number of people staying in the UK up to two years remained unchanged at 150 thousands over a span of 8 years. Conversely, there was an upward trend in other two categories. Specifically, the number of immigrants staying from 2 to 4 years slightly increased to 100 thousands by 2008. The most substantial rise was observed in the category of those intending to stay more than four years, which increased from 150 to 250 thousands immigrants.
A quick look at the pie chart reveals that work was a primary reason for the migration to the UK, constituting nearly two-fifths. Accompany was less than twice as much as study, a second-leading reason, with 16% and 32% respectively. Others and no reasons stated equally made up 7% at the bottom rank.
