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The image presents a line graph showing job numbers (in millions) in four US economic sectors from 1960 to 2020: Manufacturing, Agriculture, Retail, and Healthcare. In 1960, Manufacturing starts at 16 million, Agriculture at 10 million, Retail at just above 5 million, and Healthcare at 2 million. By 1980, Manufacturing peaks at 20 million, Agriculture drops to 8 million, Retail climbs to approximately 9 million, and Healthcare doubles to 4 million. In 2000, Manufacturing falls sharply to 12 million, Agriculture declines to 4 million, Retail slightly rises to about 11 million, and Healthcare continues increasing to 8 million. By 2020, Manufacturing further drops to 9 million, Agriculture reaches 2 million, Retail stabilizes at around 14 million, and Healthcare peaks at 17 million.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The line graph depicts the distribution of jobs across four economic categories in the US from 1960 to 2020.
Overall, it is clearly apparent that manufacturing experienced a significant increase in jobs, whereas agriculture showed the opposite trend during this period.
Looking more closely at the chart, there was initially a sharp increase in manufacturing jobs from 15 million to 20 million between 1960 and 1980. However, despite a marked drop from 20 million to nearly 17 million in 2000, the number of jobs dramatically declined to 14 million in 2020. Turning to agriculture, approximately 7 million jobs in 1960. However, this number dropped to 4 million by 1980. Having remained stable at 4 million between 2000 and 2020. In terms of retail, it accounted for 6 million jobs in 1960. After rising steeply from 6 million to nearly 10 million in 1980, the retail sector saw an increase to 15 million in 2020. Regarding healthcare, it accounted for 3 million jobs in 1960, rising dramatically to 10 million by 2000, and then slightly increasing to 15 million in 2020.
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