This graph describes the information about how much petrol is spent in the United States and the United Kingdom. The graph outlines how much the poorest, middle-income, and richest people spend their money on petrol.
There are four main features that I notice, the first one being the United States’ poorest and middle-income people dominate in petrol spending over the United Kingdom, even though their richest are not. Secondly, there are no fluctuations between the two countries. They both describes a stability on the trend, where the United States continuously decrease, since more people on the poorer side spends more, and the United Kingdom increases gradually from how much the number of middle-income people spend on their petrol. Thirdly, both the United States and the United Kingdom’s cross the 4 percent line above the center of middle-income and richest people. Lastly, The highest spender of petrol from the United States are the poorer population and the lowest spender are the richest population. Whereas the United Kingdom’s largest spender are the middle-income citizen and their smallest amount of in spending are the poor citizens.
In summary, besides the United States’ richest citizen, it dominates the petrol spending over the entire population of the United Kingdom. So the United States holds the record of the most spenders between the two countries. Even so, the two countries’ middle-income citizen are the most spenders on petrol other than the poorest and the richest.
