ESSAY INFORMATION:
Written by: Xuân Phi, 19/02/2024
Supported by: Ex-BC Examiner, 19/02/2024
Question: The chart and graph below give the information about three categories of workers in Australia in 1991 and unemployment levels within those categories in three countries between 1991 and 2005.
(IELTS Academic – 17/02/2024)
ANSWER (8.0+):
The given charts illustrate the distribution of the Australian workforce as well as unemployment rates of various worker types in three countries from 1991 to 2005. Overall, the vast majority of the workforce in Australia was Australian, followed distantly by non-English speaking and English speaking people. Additionally, the unemployment figure for Spain declined, while the statistics of Germany increased and those of Italy fluctuated despite an increase in the middle of the period.
Concerning the worker categories, Australians made up the by far greatest percentage of workers, at 76%. The figures for non-English speaking and English speaking workers were mostly comparable, standing at 13% and 11% respectively.
Regarding unemployment, the rate of Spanish people started highest at about 13%, then grew rapidly to 18% in 1993. It stayed constant in the next two years before plummeting to a low of approximately 9% in 2005. By contrast, the unemployment level in Germany increased significantly by almost threefolds from 4% in 1991 to rank first at slightly under 12% at the end of the period. Finally, the proportion for Italy underwent a constant growth of about 4% to 12% in the first 8 years prior to a noticeable dive back to 8% in the final year, moving from second to third position.
(Word count: 210)
WORD LIST
ENGLISH | TIẾNG VIỆT |
The distribution of the workforce | Sự phân bố lực lượng lao động |
Unemployment rates | Tỷ lệ thất nghiệp |
Comparable | Tương đương nhau |
The unemployment level | Tỷ lệ thất nghiệp |
Moving from second to third position | Chuyển từ vị trí thứ hai lên vị trí thứ ba |