The given graphs offer knowledge about the proportion of Australian university graduates who land a job after completing their education, as well as the elementary salary of two kinds of graduates, encompassing math graduates and other graduates between 2004 and 2012.
Overall, what stands out from the graph is that the ratio of math graduates exhibited higher than that of other graduates in both average salary and obtain employment after the surveyed period. Notably, the annual salaries of both types of graduates underwent an escalating trajectory year on year.
In 2004, while the proportion of full-time workers for math graduates stood at 80%, that of other graduates was minimally lower with 15%. Conversely, although the rate of other graduates witnessed a diminishing tendency, the opposite was true for math graduates, both peaking at approximately 85% in 2008. Moreover, at the end of period of math and other graduates declined significantly, at 75% and 65%, respectively.
Turning to average wage of graduates, both of these categories remain stable at about $41.000 in 2004 and $43.000 in two years later, at which point two kind of graduates experienced slight growth in 2012; however the fundamental salary of math graduates was higher than that of other graduates roughtly $56.000 and $51.000, in turn.
