The bar chart compares Britain’s expenditure per week on three different types of junk foods including hamburgers, fish and chips, pizza from three levels of income in 1990.
Overall, budget allocation priorities for kinds of junk foods differed across the three groups, and expenditure on fast food varied based on people’s income, which meant that the high-income group spent a higher budget compared to that in the low-income group.
In terms of the high-income group, a total of approximately eighty million was spent on fast food per week, half being allocated for hamburgers (40 million), and below 20 for pizza. The average income group set aside the highest amount for hamburgers, with 32 million per week while it dedicated close to 25 million for fish and chips but assigned the smallest budget to pizza. Regarding the low-income group, the largest expenditure went fish and chips at about 16 million, followed by hamburgers while around 6 million was spent on pizza.
The bar chart compares Britain’s expenditure per week on three
different
types of junk
foods
including hamburgers, fish and chips, pizza from three levels of income in 1990.
Overall
, budget allocation priorities for kinds of junk
foods
differed across the three
groups
, and expenditure on
fast
food
varied based on
people
’s income, which meant that the high-income
group
spent a higher budget compared to that in the low-income group.
In terms of the high-income
group
, a total of approximately eighty
million
was spent
on
fast
food
per week, half
being allocated
for hamburgers (40
million)
, and below 20 for pizza. The average income
group
set aside the highest amount for hamburgers, with 32
million
per week while it dedicated close to 25
million
for fish and chips
but
assigned the smallest budget to pizza. Regarding the low-income
group
, the largest expenditure went fish and chips at about 16
million
, followed by hamburgers while around 6
million
was spent
on pizza.