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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 chart shows the percentages of five different categories (food, leisure, clothing, transport and energy) in Europe between 1960 and 2000.
Overall, there were mass-drop on spending habits on food, leisure, clothing and energy resources, while the way people spend money on transport has an increase in 40 years.
Concentrating on the categories that experienced decreases over time, the largest amount of expanses in European countries was food stood out with around 33% in 1960, and this figure declined substantially to 14% with the biggest difference over 40 years. Another category saw a decrease was people’s money spent on their leisure time, gradually falling from initial 20% to 12% between 1960 and 2000. Following the trend, money spent on shopping habits, starting at 10% in early years, went down negligibly to 5% while least expanse list on European’s list was energy, declined by 3% and stood at the bottom of the chart at the during the whole period.
Turning to one category that saw an increase among other four group of spending, the second less profitable industry was transport in 1960’s, significantly growing from initial 9% to become the top spending commitments in 2000, at approximately 15%.
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