The line graph illustrates the changes in accommodation costs in three various countries from 1997 to 2014.Overall,the house prices in the given period increased, at varying degrees.While Country A had higher housing costs,followed by Country B and Country C stayed at the bottom,despite a gradual increase.
Country A and country B exhibited similar patterns in initial years,having a price tag of almost $200,000. It was not until these costs began to surge at the turn of the century, with the former country raising the prices to $550,000 in 2004 and the latter reaching $300,000.Despite increasing significantly,the amount of the houses’ price in Country A dropped minimally to $450,000 by 2009,when Country B prices a single house at an impressive $500,000.From that year on, the discrepancy became more pronounced, with Country A seeing its accommodation prices skyrocket to $750,000 and Country B remaining stable in its figures.
Country C, however, somewhat bucked the trend. Starting at about $120,000, the housing cost in this country followed an uninterrupted upward trajectory before doubling in 2007, after which it bounced back to its starting point a year later. In 2009, this figure rebounded to $250,000 and maintained a steady growth to $270,000 in 2013, thereafter which it fell back to the previous peak – $250,000.
