The table given compares two different for graduates and non- graduates in the UK based on average salaries of age groups between 2000 and 2010.
Looking at the illustration, it is immediately evident that the income bracket of graduates is higher than the people who are not graduates. Additionally, most of the graduates’ salaries of various ages surveyed showed an overall upward trend, in contrast with the salary of non-graduates.
In the average salaries of all age groups, it is immediately evident that graduates earned more than non-graduates, and their incomes are approximately 29.900 pounds, which was roughly higher 12.100 pounds than non-graduates.
To see more specifically about the salary of different age groups of graduates and non-graduates, it shows different age groups of graduates are higher than different age groups of non-graduates. In age 22, the graduates are record 15.800 pounds, whereas the non-graduates’ earnings were little lower at 14,500. The former’s salary nearly doubled to 31.500 pounds in age 32, greatly exceeding the latter’s salary of 19.100 pounds. Furthermore, while the incomes of non-graduates have remained unchanged, the number for graduates has climbed gradually by 1.300 pounds. Over time, those between the ages of 42 and 52 who had a degree earned a steadily increasing salary of approximately 34.000 pounds while their counterparts saw their pay decline by nearly 1,000. By the time they were 62 years old, both groups showed a sharp drop in income, with grades earning 23,100 pounds and non-graduates earning 15,300 pounds.
