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Writing Homework - Pie Chart

The document discusses energy generation sources in 1995 and 2005 in one country, with petrol decreasing from 30% to 20% of overall energy generation share while nuclear energy increased from 6.4% to over 10%. It also compares proportions of domestic spending on different categories between Japan and Malaysia in 2010, finding the largest differences were in housing at 1/5 of spending in Japan vs over 1/3 in Malaysia, and transportation at 20% in Japan vs 10% in Malaysia.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
63 views2 pages

Writing Homework - Pie Chart

The document discusses energy generation sources in 1995 and 2005 in one country, with petrol decreasing from 30% to 20% of overall energy generation share while nuclear energy increased from 6.4% to over 10%. It also compares proportions of domestic spending on different categories between Japan and Malaysia in 2010, finding the largest differences were in housing at 1/5 of spending in Japan vs over 1/3 in Malaysia, and transportation at 20% in Japan vs 10% in Malaysia.

Uploaded by

fasfadf
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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1.

With regard to energy generation, petrol, in 1995, held a major share


of nearly 30 percent of the overall; however, the proportion accounted
by it decline drastically down to just under a fifth in 2005. In contrast,
the percentage of power produced by nuclear in 1995 was only 6.4
percent, which then rise sharply to just over one in ten. Likewise, the
same goes for the figure for other substances, albeit to a lesser extent.
2.
The provided pie charts compare the proportion of domestic cost on
different categories between Japan and Malaysia in 2010.
In general, the percentage of money spent distributed equally among
all aspects in the two countries, including transportation, foodstuff,
housing and other goods and services, except for health care. It is also
apparent that the expenditure for housing and transporting in the two
countries differs from each other the most, whereas that of the rest
appears almost identical.
In terms of the most distinct feature between the two countries, in
2010, the proportion of money on housing in Japan constitutes
approximately one fifth, while in Malaysia the same feature took up to
over a third of the total expenditure. Similarly, the percentage of
spending on means of transport accounts for exactly 20 percent in Japan,
which only became halved in Malaysia.
With regards to the remaining household expenditures, all of which
only differs for 3 percent in the percentages of each categorization
between the given countries. To be exact, the proportion of health care
in Japan held 29 percent, which is 3 percent higher than that in
Malaysia; likewise, there was a similar trend when it comes to other
goods and services. On the other hand, the figure for food in Japan is 3
percent lower comparing to that in Malaysia.

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