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The image contains a line graph with no title, displaying trends over time from 1960 to 2000 in five different categories: Food, Leisure, Clothing, Transport, and Energy. The y-axis shows percentages ranging from 0% to 35%, increasing by 5% increments, while the x-axis lists the years in 10-year increments. Data points at 1960 show Food roughly at 33%, Leisure at 12%, Clothing at 13%, Transport at 9%, and Energy at 6%. By 1970, Food decreased to 31%, Leisure increased to 14%, Clothing decreased to 12%, Transport increased to 11%, and Energy remained at 6%. In 1980, Food continued to drop to 27%, Leisure rose to 16%, Clothing fell to 11%, Transport continued to rise to 13%, and Energy stayed at 6%. By 1990, Food dropped further to 23%, Leisure went up to 18%, Clothing declined to 10%, Transport rose to 14%, and Energy stayed consistent at 6%. Finally, in 2000, Food decreased to 20%, Leisure increased to 21%, Clothing decreased to 9%, Transport increased to 15%, and Energy continued at 6%. No data points for individual years between the decades are provided. The lines for Food, Clothing, and Energy have negative slopes, while the lines for Leisure and Transport have positive slopes.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The line graph compares six categories based on the proportion of expenditure allocated to each category between 1960 and 2000 in a European country. Overall, the proportion of money spent on all categories decreased, while the opposite occurred in the case of transport. Additionally, although food dominated the spending for most of this period, transport became the category with the highest proportion of expenditure by the end of the timeframe, while energy consistently had the lowest figures.
Regarding the categories exhibiting downward trends, in the initial year, the highest proportion of expenditure was on food, accounting for around 33%, followed by leisure, which received 20%. Both categories showed a clear decline, with about 13% allocated to food and roughly 12% to leisure by 2000. In terms of clothing and energy, their expenditure levels were considerably lower than the other categories. They maintained a similar pattern throughout the period, with about 10% and 5% of expenditure allocated to clothing and energy, respectively, in the first year. This allocation steadily declined to around 5% for clothing and nearly 2% for energy by the final year.
In contrast, the data for transport was an exception to the overall trend. Although transport had the second lowest share at just below 10% in 1960, it had become the category with the highest proportion of expenditure by 2000.
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