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The image presents a chart displaying the percentage of income adults and children, divided by gender, spent on four common items in the UK in 1998: food, electronic equipment, music, and videos. Adults spent 25% on food, 5% on electronic equipment, 5% on music, and 1% on videos; men spent 14% on food, 10% on electronic equipment, 5% on music, and 2% on videos; women spent 39% on food, 1% on electronic equipment, 5% on music, and 0.5% on videos; children spent 10% on food, 23% on electronic equipment, 39% on music, and 12% on videos; boys spent 9% on food, 18% on electronic equipment, 38% on music, and 18% on videos; girls spent 11% on food, 5% on electronic equipment, 40% on music, and 17% on videos.
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The table provides four common goods—food, electronic equipment, music, and videos—and people grouped into gender and age groups who allocated their incomes to those four items in the UK in 1998.
Adults spent most of their earnings on food products (25%), while the item with the lowest importance was videos (1%); electronic equipment and music were at the same percentage (5%). While men spent only 14% of their income on food, this percentage was about three times higher for women (39%); however, men showed more interest in electronic equipment (10%), while women spent just 1%; music was at the same percentage as for adults.
The most interesting type of item for youngsters to buy was music: children (39%), boys (38%), and girls (40%). While the percentage for food was approximately 10% for all of them, the percentage for videos varied: for boys and girls the percentage was about 18%, while for children in general it was 12%.
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