This line graph illustrates the results of a survey of the reasons given on why people move to the capital city of a country.
Overall, the chart indicates that despite multiple variations and factors, there is still a noticeable increase of numbers throughout the years. The leading cause was employment, the highest of numbers, while adventure was the least factor of the relocation.
According to the graph, The main reason for relocation is employment, it has experience a consistent growth from 2000 to 2005, which is 60,000 to about 85,000 people. However, it showed a slow increase to just above 90,000 from 2005 to 2010, the same goes for the reason of study. It grew consistently from about 25,000 to just below 50,000, and the trend maintained a steady rise, peaking at around 85,000 by 2015. Though, the trend of both contrasted each other at the end of the period. Employment decreased, while study increased.
In contrast, family and friends started at about 20,000 in 2000, peaked at 30,000 in 2010, and stabilized around 25,000 by 2015. While, Adventure remained the least cited reason, increasing slightly from 10,000 to around 15,000 over the same period.
In summary, employment and education were the key drivers of relocation, while family and friends remained stable, and adventure had a negligible impact on migration trends.
