Переведите текст, пожалуйста) Children splash out on snacks. Children in the UK spend £13 a week, with the biggest proportion of their spending going on sweets, snacks and drinks, according to official figures released today. In 2002-03 and 2003-04, the nation's seven to 15-year-olds spent an average of £2.30 a week on snack-type food and a further £2.30 on other food - including school meals and takeaways - according to figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS). These two categories made up 36% of their spending. Clothing and footwear accounted for £2.00 of their cash, while games and hobbies cost them £1.70, 80p of which went on electronic games and software. Mobile phone costs represented just 50p of the £13.00 total. Young teenagers were the biggest spenders, with girls aged between 13 and 15 spending an average of £21.50 a week and boys of the same age group spending £20.40. Children aged seven to nine spent an average of £7.00 a week, while 10 to 12-year-olds spent £11.00. The average weekly spend on confectionery, snacks and drinks among young teenagers was £6.80 - over a quarter of their total spend. Young teenage girls were the biggest spenders on mobile phones, averaging £1.50 a week compared with an average spend of 90p among their male peers, while young boys spent a larger proportion of their money on games and hobbies (35%). Spending by children contributed to an average family outlay of £418 a week in 2003-04, according to the ONS's annual review of family spending. Its expenditure and food survey of around 7,000 UK households revealed that the bulk of spending went on transport, accounting for £61 a week. This included £28.10 spent on the purchase of a vehicle and £23.80 spent on running it. Public transport accounted for just £8.80 of the weekly spend. Recreation was the next biggest outlay, with £57 a week going on TVs, computers, newspapers, books, leisure activities and holidays. Package holidays abroad cost families an average of £11.60 for each week of the year, while just 80p a week went towards package holidays in the UK. Total expenditure varied according to the size of the family and where it lived. In London, the average weekly spend was £486, compared with £336 in the northeast. Households consisting of three or more adults spent an average of £686 a week, while the 'average' family of two adults and two children spent £611. For the first time the ONS looked into the amount spent by households on housingrelated costs. It found that £116 of family spending went towards running a property, with an average of £39 a week spent on mortgage repayments, £23 on alterations and improvements, £20 on council tax, water charges and other service charges and £13 on rent. When only households paying mortgages were put under the spotlight, the average weekly spend on repayments was found to be £97. Households in London paid £134 a week - 31% more than the national average - while those in the north-east spent just £58 to service their mortgage.