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The chart below shows the percentage of households in owned and rented accommodation in England and Wales between 1918 and 2011

The-chart-below-shows-the-percentage-of-households-in-owned-and-rented-accommodation-in-England-and-Wales-between-1918-and-2011

2 thoughts on “The chart below shows the percentage of households in owned and rented accommodation in England and Wales between 1918 and 2011”

  1. The bar chart compares two types of countries – England and Wales – in terms of their households in owned and rented accommodation. Units are measured in percentages.
    Overall, households in rented accommodation dominated half way in question, exception of year 1971.Another half piece households in owned accommodation led with rest of are.Of particularly note is, households in rented accommodation was depicted ranked the highest with an impressive 76% at the beginning however this rates significantly plumped about 32% at the end of period.
    As far as households in rented accommodation users are concerned, the gap widens. An remarkable 76% of households used rented accommodation, surpassing households in owned accommodation with 54% in the 1918. At the next time, two catogories illustrated virtually same rates to comparison, that is, household which used rented accommodation just over about 65%, drammatically higher than owner households only at just over about 30 % in 1939 and 1953 years respectively. However, in the middle period, different patterns can be observed because two types of households belongs to same percentages of 50%.
    When it comes to households in owned accommodation, also gap is significantly widens. An impressive 60% of them, in contrast to other households about at 40% in the year 1981 . Then also same situation which rates repeated, owner households expounded about 66 and 67 percentages, this significantly higher than rented households of about 30 and 31 percentages respectively.

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    • around band 5 to 5.5. Many phrases don’t make sense:
      1. “dominated half way in question”
      2. “led with rest of are”
      3. “plumped”

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