The bar chart demonstrates the proportion of households with various items in one country, comparing 2001 and 2008.
Overall, all goods faced an upward trend. If in 2001 a telephone was the most owned item, in 2008 it shared the first place with a microwave and a CD player. In contrast, a dishwasher remained the least owned item in both years.
In 2001, about 90% of houses had a telephone. About 80% of households used a microwave, making it the second on the list. Additionally, a CD player had the third proportion with about 70%. Regarding such items as a dishwasher (approximately 20%), a mobile phone (about 30%), a home computer (slightly under 40%) were rare compared to 2008.
In 2008, the figure of all electronic devices increased. The most used items were a telephone, a microwave, and a CD player all demonstrating about 90%. The number of houses with mobile phones (80%) and internet access (60%) doubled, showing a dramatic rise. The percentage of a clothes dryer slightly increased, from about 60% to 70%. Turning to a home computer, it rose approximately for 30%, picking at 70%.
