There’s a sucker born every minute, and there’s a good chance he lives in Georgia, according to a recent study. 
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
Joke24
March 19th, 2012
1:30 pm
Any money that doesn’t go towards strippers and drugs is pretty much a waste if you ask me.
All in good fun
March 19th, 2012
1:30 pm
The lotto is good fun every once in a while. I am by no means poor, but I still like to play the big games (Mega Millions, Powerball) when the jackpots get over $150 mill. I know I am not going to win, but it is a good way to get your imagination going. I think the odds are something like 1 in 175 million
Frank Furter
March 19th, 2012
1:32 pm
You gotta be in it…to win it !!
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Not-Quite-Devils/189460134436969
wompuscat
March 19th, 2012
1:34 pm
I know the odds of winning are against me. But think of my odds if I don’t have a ticket.
This is a Joke
March 19th, 2012
1:34 pm
If Georgians are a sucker for the lotto, then why is HOPE broke. That means someone has their hand in the cookie jar. If that is the case, why is the education department so messed up. This is all a joke.
Contractor
March 19th, 2012
1:37 pm
This doesn’t surprise me, especially when I see black people I work with going to the store to play Cash 3 twice a day every day, and poor white trash blowing money on this crap. I enjoy gambling like most (I prefer casinos over the lottery), but the issue is how the lower class waste all of their money on this, and I can promise the world around half of that toal in the article is government money being used to buy tickets. You don’t have to like what I said, but we all know it’s true.
So Tired of BS
March 19th, 2012
1:37 pm
I prefer to think it’s a return of my tax dollars given to the “less fortunate”, the very same ones occupier and thief keeps referencing. It is the perfect way to tax the stupid. The lottery has and
always will target the weak of mind and character. Until you get rid of the moochers who only seek
to steal from the producers we will continue to have idiotic programs such as the lottery.
BTW, no more paid pre-K. If the state ever really did an investigation they would find that it is largely just paid day care. The lottery should only pay for students who produce. That means that average and ordinary won’t cut it. In public schools no student taking a basic college prep curriculum would be allowed the HOPE their first 2 years of college. A GPA of 3.5 or above would be required to become eligible for honors and AP courses and would be required of ALL HOPE recipients. That would eliminate a ton of people who really are not college material anyway.
FLUSHLIMBORTZ
March 19th, 2012
1:39 pm
One thing for sure. DAWG aint no Hope recipient. He should be arrested for mutilating the english language.
Common Cause
March 19th, 2012
1:39 pm
Makes you feel good about Georgia. How much of the money was SSI, Disability, Unemployment, and plain government give out programs. Obama, save us….
darb
March 19th, 2012
1:40 pm
The lottery is nothing but a tax for stupid folks