Report: Georgians are ’suckers’ for the lottery

There’s a sucker born every minute, and there’s a good chance he lives in Georgia, according to a recent study. powerball

BloombergBusinessweek reports Georgians are No. 1 at being bad with money, earning the Empire State of the South the top ranking in its latest Sucker Index.

It’s our love of playing the lottery (Reminder: World record $640 million jackpot drawing tonight!) that’s set us up for ridicule.

Americans spend $50 billion a year in tickets for state-run games, which have the worst odds of any form of legal gambling, writes Bloomberg.

Georgia residents spent an average $470.73 on the lottery in 2010, or 1 percent of their personal income, while they received the sixth-highest prize payouts, 63 cents for each dollar spent, the Sucker Index shows. Only Massachusetts had higher spending, $860.70 per adult, more than three times the U.S. average. But Massachusetts players are luckier, they won back 72 cents for each dollar spent.

The article throws salt on the wounds by saying Georgia’s per capita income is about 10 percent below the U.S. average, and that lower-income residents tend to buy a disproportionate amount of tickets.

And we’re not slowing down: The $640 million frenzy prompted Georgians to buy $6.6 million in Mega Millions tickets on Thursday alone, compared to normal Mega Millions sales of around $2 million for an entire week.

How do the Sucker Index rankings work? Bloomberg took the total spent on ticket sales in each state and subtracted the amount of lottery prizes awarded. The difference was divided by the total personal income of each state’s residents.

Using that formula, the top five Sucker Index states are: Georgia, Massachusetts, New York, Michigan, South Carolina.

Georgia Lottery spokeswoman Tandi Reddick said Bloomberg’s story is “demeaning” in a guest editorial appearing Sunday in the Augusta Chronicle.

Reddick said the Georgia County Guide reports that Georgia’s 10 poorest counties accounted for less than 1 percent of Georgia Lottery sales in fiscal year 2009.

That may be true, but I’d surmise the 10 poorest counties in Georgia represent less than 1 percent of Georgia’s wealth as well.

I play the lottery, and will continue to do so. It’s fun to think $1 could become $1 million overnight. If I was poor, I’d probably play more.

Hope, the emotion and the scholarship program, is a powerful thing.

Note: Updated March 30, 2012.

129 comments Add your comment

I'm pretty sure it's my business, not yours

March 19th, 2012
8:51 pm

First, the lottery generated plenty of money for Hope when the proceeds were used ONLY for
college fees, tuition, etc… It started running out of money when pre-K, computers for every high school, etc..were paid for out of lottery funds. As with all good ideas, government (in this case state of Ga government) figured out votes could be bought with dollars. Consequently, the Hope is now running out of money, and the politicians don’t have the spine to cut back to it’s original purpose. Therefore, it will probably eventually fold.
That said, if I want to buy a ticket, it’s no one’s business.

talemated

March 19th, 2012
9:06 pm

i played lottery for years. my savings are almost gone & my ten year auto nedds an air conditioner, it’s hot outside, & i’m broke. i know, you’re saying i’m a foll. guess what?
you’re right. the lottery will ruin you if you cannot control yourself. i’m contributing to be a poor idiot.

talemated

March 19th, 2012
9:06 pm

Enter your comments here

talemated

March 19th, 2012
9:12 pm

i’m contributing to lottery so i can be free from having a decent life. i am in the hole so much, i’ve decided i am a fool. don’t be sorry for a nut like me, try to help someone to understand just how the lottery works. people like me contribute to making the rich more rich, & the poor more poor. this is s fact.

Abe

March 19th, 2012
10:43 pm

BULLDOG62568,
You are incorrect on a couple of things.
1. The changes to the cashing bonuses for retailers was eliminated by the Governor and the legislator. The GLC had nothing to do with it. In fact, they fought for keeping the 2% cashing bonus for retailers and opposed the other changes that came to be.
2. All GLC employees (including CEO and execs) were stripped of all bonuses and incentive pay.
3. It is not state law nor a GLC policy that you must have two employees working in order to sell lottery.
Please do more research before posting.

Terry

March 19th, 2012
10:52 pm

The lottery is how the poor people who don’t pay taxes, pay taxes.

drew

March 20th, 2012
5:58 am

This can’t be true. Although I personally don’t play the lottery, everyone I know who does play, tells me they’ve won more money than they’ve spent. I guess sometimes hope just make people stupid, eh?

georgiadawg70

March 20th, 2012
6:51 am

fools and money always part company.

monroe

March 20th, 2012
7:12 am

the lottery is a big con against African-Americans, who play the lottery most. The money goes to pay college expenses for rich white people while African-Americans are kept down by the system. I’m tired of this.

Hope and a prayer

March 20th, 2012
7:15 am

It’s ludicrous how uninformed some of these comments are…if you’ve got the time to spit banalities, perhaps a lottery ticket is your best hope