#Writing
The pie charts show the breakdown of yearly expenditure in Springfield College in three separate years, namely 1990, 2000 and 2010. Overall, the expenditure on insurance, technology, and teacher salaries saw a rising trend, while spending on the remaining three sectors had the opposite trend. Notably, salaries of teachers accounted for the majority of spending in the college in all three years.
Spending on three categories rose during the period. Money given to teachers as wages made up 40% of the total expenditure in the college in 1990, and this figure grew to peak at 50% after a decade. However, this peak was not maintained and followed by a drop of 5% in the last year. Although spending on technology was not as high as on teachers, it saw by far the biggest growth, soaring from mere 1% in 1990 to 20% in 2010. The third category having an upward trend was insurance, which went up from 2% to 8% over the span.
The percentage of money spent on other three sectors declined. Although salaries of other employees in the college constituted 28% at first, the figure decreased to 15%. The share of books went down from 15% to 9%, and that of furniture and equipment fell to 3% despite the initial 14%.
@Boburmirzo_English
The pie charts show the breakdown of yearly expenditure in Springfield College in three separate years, namely 1990, 2000 and 2010. Overall, the expenditure on insurance, technology, and teacher salaries saw a rising trend, while spending on the remaining three sectors had the opposite trend. Notably, salaries of teachers accounted for the majority of spending in the college in all three years.
Spending on three categories rose during the period. Money given to teachers as wages made up 40% of the total expenditure in the college in 1990, and this figure grew to peak at 50% after a decade. However, this peak was not maintained and followed by a drop of 5% in the last year. Although spending on technology was not as high as on teachers, it saw by far the biggest growth, soaring from mere 1% in 1990 to 20% in 2010. The third category having an upward trend was insurance, which went up from 2% to 8% over the span.
The percentage of money spent on other three sectors declined. Although salaries of other employees in the college constituted 28% at first, the figure decreased to 15%. The share of books went down from 15% to 9%, and that of furniture and equipment fell to 3% despite the initial 14%.
@Boburmirzo_English