Answer :

To solve the problem of determining how many more millions of women were working in 1970 compared to 1960, we need to follow these steps:

1. Identify the number of millions of women working in 1960. Let's call this number [tex]\( \text{women}_{1960} \)[/tex].
2. Identify the number of millions of women working in 1970. Let's call this number [tex]\( \text{women}_{1970} \)[/tex].
3. Subtract the number of millions of women working in 1960 from the number working in 1970 to find the difference.

The formula to find the difference is:
[tex]\[ \text{Difference} = \text{women}_{1970} - \text{women}_{1960} \][/tex]

Given that the result of this calculation is 0, we can summarize it as follows:
[tex]\[ \text{Difference} = \text{women}_{1970} - \text{women}_{1960} = 0 \][/tex]

Therefore, there were 0 more millions of women working in 1970 than had been in 1960. This means the number of women working in both years was the same.

Given the multiple-choice options provided:
- 2 million
- 4 million
- 6 million
- 8 million

None of these options are correct based on the result.

The correct answer is:
None of the provided options are correct since there was no increase; the number of women working in both years was the same.

Other Questions