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The image depicts a line graph with two lines representing the percent of income spent on fuel in the United States and the United Kingdom, segmented by income level (poorest, middle-income, richest). The United States line starts above 5%, decreases to just below 4% for middle-income, and further decreases to just above 3% for the richest. The United Kingdom line starts at just over 3%, decreases to around 2% for middle-income, and remains close to 2% for the richest. The X-axis is labeled "Percent of Income" with a range from 0 to 6, and the Y-axis represents the income levels.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The line graph illustrates the proportion of people from each income group (Poorest, Middle-Income, Richest) who spend money on fuel in US and UK.
Overall, the percentage of individuals in every class who spent money on fuel was the highest in the UK compared to the US.
Firstly, poor people in the UK spent around 0.5 percent of their income on fuel, suggesting that they prefer not using cars more often, whereas people of average income level spent more than 3 percent of their salaries on their cars. In addition, the richest individuals spent approximately 3.99 percent of their earnings to fill the fuel.
On the other hand, in the US majority of poor people spent around 4 percent of their income on fuel, while middleclass people spent the highest in the US with a total ratio of around 5 percent of their salaries on fuel. In contrast, therichest people spent the least on fuel, just around 2.5 percent.
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