The presented data depicts the costumer expenditures on various items in 2002 in five different nations. At first glance, it is clear that consumers spent the most on provisions and tobacco and the least on items used for leisure and education.
Turning to the details, it is lucid that Turkish residents used up just below a third of their finances on food and drinks, while the Swedes paid up only 15.77% of their monetary resources on the above-mentioned category. It is interesting to note that leisure and education were the categories that were allocated the least amount of funds by the consumers, with all of them assigning an insignificant portion of their money to it. Another significant detail is that the Italians had the highest percentage of clothing expenses, with exactly 9% , while the Swedish nationals only administered 5.40% to that expense.
Overall, it is crystal clear that the Turkish had the highest percentage of expenditure in the given categories, and the Swedes allocated the least funds towards these categories out of the five given nations.
