The line graph illustrates the data on the number of students who recently graduated university in the UK from 1992 to 2002, while the bar chart provides the major changes in graduate-level positions in different categories during the same period.
Overall, it is clear that, although graduations occurred on a large scale in every period, graduates were more interested in enrolling in careers as professional employees compared to other conventional jobs.
We can see that at the beginning of the period, there was a significant number of students, which composed around 160,000 graduates; after five years, these indicators grew noticeably, reaching a peak with 200,000 students. Remarkably, the UK universities graduation tendency slowly dropped by around 40,000.
Despite many students leaving their educational foundation, they immediately preferred to start some career options. To clarify, at the early phase, individuals wanted working in professional fields, composing around 40-60% of students. However, demanding professions such as manager and secretarial positions had fewer numbers compared to expert staff in every period. Ultimately, some graduates had minor demand for entering sales and other types of job categories, which represented only 10 individuals.
