The table illustrates data about how much money an average family in the UK earned and paid for food and clothes, whereas the pie charts demonstrate the distribution of money spent on those categories.
Overall, the diagrams compare the significant changes in the earnings of an average households in the UK and their daily expenditure on various commodities including: fruit, vegetable and meat in 2010 and 2013.
It is evident that the income of families experienced a dramatic decrease, while their spending continued to rise. By 2010, the salary had been dropped considerably from 29000 to 25000 over the examined period. Nevertheless, the outgoing increased slightly, showing 14000 in 2010 and 15000 in 2015.
Notably, a vast majority of income were spent on clothes nearly a quarter of chart at the beginning of the given time-frame and by 2013 had been responsible for 30% of the diagram. Surprisingly, people paid less money on meat and fish in 2013, as the percentage exhibited 6% less figure than in 2010. The other remaining products presented just a subtle variation, not to mention the other food, which remained the same with 18%.
