Task 1: The Pie Charts Below Show The Average Household Expenditures in Japan and Malaysia in The Year 2010.

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Task 1: The pie charts below show the average household expenditures in

Japan and Malaysia in the year 2010.


Summarise the information by selecting and reporting the main features, and
make comparisons where relevant.
Compared in the given pie graphs are the average expenses on five household
categories, namely housing, transport, food, health care and other goods and
services in Japan and Malaysia in 2010.
It is lucidly observed that housing, food and other commodities appeared to surpass
their counterparts in both nations. What’s more, different services was the first
priority of Japanese consumers while the Malaysian expended mostly on housing.
Looking more into the details, the amount of money poured on other services in
Japan accounted for approximately 29% of the total expenditure, which was,
however, only 26% in the case of Malaysia. Food was the runner-up in the
spending of citizens in two surveyed countries, with roughly 24% and 27% in the
same sequence. Additionally, Malaysian inhabitants invested more or less one third
of the consumption on housing, exceeding that of Japanese ones by 13%.
Transport and medical care received the least attention from customers of Japan
and Malaysia. The proportions of the expenses on these demands were respectively
10% and 3% in the latter nation, which both doubled in the former.

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