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The image shows average weekly earnings for various age groups of men and women graduates and non-graduates. Men: 16-19 graduates 200, non-graduates 100; 20-24 graduates 300, non-graduates 250; 25-29 graduates 450, non-graduates 400; 30-39 graduates 600, non-graduates 500; 40-49 graduates 650, non-graduates 550; 50-59 graduates 650, non-graduates 500; 60+ graduates 500, non-graduates 450. Women: 16-19 graduates 200, non-graduates 100; 20-24 graduates 250, non-graduates 200; 25-29 graduates 350, non-graduates 300; 30-39 graduates 400, non-graduates 350; 40-49 graduates 450, non-graduates 400; 50-59 graduates 450, non-graduates 350; 60+ graduates 350, non-graduates 300.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The information presented in the chart provides us with the average weekly incomes of male and female graduates and non-graduates. On the whole, we can see that men’s earnings are more than those of women.
Looking more closely at the trend for men graduates, since the age of 20, it can be seen that the figures increased dramatically at around the age of 40, with 700 pounds per week. The highest-earning males are aged between 40 and 60, when their incomes stabilize. Non-graduate men experience a similar trend to graduate men but with slightly lower incomes.
If we observe the trends for women, at the age of 24, weekly graduate earnings rise to 425 pounds, and after that, the figures seem to hit a plateau that does not change until retirement. While the women non-graduates’ earnings are highest between the ages of 25 and 29, with less than 350 pounds.
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