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The image is a line graph with three lines representing "Monthly salary," "Colored TV," and "Black & White TV" over 5 points in time: 1953, 1958, 1963, 1968, and 1973. The Y-axis shows values from 0 to 200, at 20 unit intervals. Monthly salary is consistently high, beginning at around Y160 in 1953, increasing to nearly Y180 in 1958, dipping to Y160 in 1963, jumping to over Y180 in 1968, and reaching nearly Y200 in 1973. Colored TV starts at roughly Y40 in 1953, drops to around Y20 in 1958 and 1963, and then sharply rises to Y120 in 1968 and further to approximately Y160 in 1973. Black & White TV begins just below Y80 in 1953, descends to around Y60 in 1958, further decreases to roughly Y40 in 1963, and then significantly drops to nearly Y20 in both 1968 and 1973.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The line chart illustrate data about Japanese month salary between 1953 to 1983 also the prices of black and white TV and colored TV.
It is noticeable that in this graph the rise dramatically are related to colored TV and monthly salary. The next point is, the lowest slope of the graph is related to black and white TV.
In 1953-month salary start with slight jump and after a long time almost two decades later with a significant increase, it was placed at the highest level of the chart (180 Yen). What is remarkable about the color TV chart is its sharp drop from $180 to almost $100 between 1958 and 1963. After that, by the end of 1973 the chart’s downward trend was very slow dropping only ten Yen.
A black and white television in 1953 was quite expensive roughly $80 more than a monthly salary. And almost ten years later, the price continues to drop, down to $39.
Word Count: 160