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The image contains two pie charts labeled Female and Male with different sections representing employment by occupation type, further divided into Manual and Non-manual categories. In the Female chart, Manual occupations have Craft or similar at 29%, General labourers at 31%, and Other manual at 9%, while Non-manual categories have Managerial and professional at 27%, Clerical or related at 3%, and Other non-manual at 1%. The Male chart shows a different distribution with Manual occupations including Craft or similar at 24%, General labourers at 36%, and Other manual at 6%, and Non-manual categories as Managerial and professional at 26%, Clerical or related at 6%, and Other non-manual at 2%.
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The charts illustrate different patterns of employment taken on by the two genders in Great Britain in 1992.
Overall, a clear trend emerged, indicating that manual occupations were more prominent in men, while non-manual ones accounted for the majority of their counterparts.
As regards the manual category, craft or similar work occupied nearly a quarter of men’s employment, around eight times as much as that of females. Meanwhile, among both sexes, general laborers held an equal share of a mere 1%, followed by other manual occupations with approximately 26%.
Conversely, clerical or related jobs contributed the highest proportion, just less than a third in women, while this category in men represented a mere 6%, only one-fifth compared to that of women. Managers and professionals in females ranked next, at nearly 30%; managerial men also made up a significant amount of more than a third. Other non-manual employment in females and males occupied 9% and 6% respectively.
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