The pie charts give information about six different categories: housing, food, health care, education, transportation and other which people spent money on in 1950 and 2010. The units are measured in percentage.
On the whole, the graphs reveal an uneven distribution of money among six household sector, as can be clearly seen from the graphs, housing was found to be the most money consuming area in 1950, whereas food made up a third of market share in 2010.
The expenses on food, health care, transportation and other categories had by far the lowest indexes in the year of 1950. They experienced significant growth with figures from 11.2, 2.4, 3.3 and 4.4 to 34, 14, 4.5 and 19.2% respectively.
However, the reverse was true for housing, it illustrated dramatic change, which was by approximately 50% (72.1 against 22%). As far as education was concerned, it showed slight decline with figures falling by just 0.3 unit from 6.6%.
