The given bar chart demonstrates the rates of British demographic in two sexes being employed in different fields in the year 2005.
In general, there were 5 fields having higher statistics of male workers compared to their female counterparts, with the opposite pattern observed in associate professional and technical sales and customer service, administrative and secretarial, and personal service. Additionally, administrative and secretarial occupation was the most prevalent in the British job market.
Regarding occupations with more males than females, skilled trades had the percentage of the former, at 20%, exactly ten times as high as that of the latter. Meanwhile, 15% of managers and senior officials were male, compared to slightly above 10% of women working in this field, equivalent to the statistics of females working as professionals. Simultaneously, almost 15% of professional labour force was male. In the meantime, process, plant and machine operatives have approximately 12% of males and 3% of females orderly, while elementary workers had similar figures of men and women, at 13% and 11% respectively
Regarding occupations with more females than males, personal service had the percentage of the former, at nearly 15%, roughly quintuple as high as that of the latter, at approximately 3%. Meanwhile, 5% of sales and customer service workers were male, being outnumbered by slightly above 10% of women working in this field. Simultaneously, 15% of asociate professional and technical workforce was women, compared to about 13% of men colleagues. In the administrative and secreatarial operatives have approximately 5% of men, which was about half the proportion of women in this occupation.
