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
Joe
March 19th, 2012
2:20 pm
Am I the only one that realized that 10 Million people in Georgia (http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/13000.html) times $500 per person average equals 5 billion, not 50? How can you trust an article that discusses facts but gets the facts wrong?
A person SMART enough to know......
March 19th, 2012
2:28 pm
@Joe GEORGE MATHIS is from GA and probably educated in Ga Government Schools and then UGa probably so please don’t fault him on his Math Skills or the lack there of.
Hope Graduate
March 19th, 2012
2:28 pm
Lottery a suckers bet? I’m not so sure. Let’s take for example tomorrow’s Mega Millions drawing. With its prize structure and odds, there is an expected value of .17. That means for every dollar spent in the long run, you should expect to win 17 cents. That’s actually what you call a good bet.
Roulette for example has a -.0526 expected value and Vegas Strip style blackjack has a -.05 ev.
So playing tomorrow’s Mega Millions is a much better bet than playing blackjack or roulette. But those aren’t the things you’ll hear people talking about.
Dawg Fan - go back to school!
March 19th, 2012
2:30 pm
Your writing is atrocious! “THE LOTTORY IS GOOD 4 THE SCOOLS SO DONT BE TLAKING BAD ABOUT IT HAVE U SEEN SUM OF THEES DUM KIDS THEES DAZE?” really?
Dumb parents make dumb kids which make even dumber kids. Even if YOU won the lottery, you’d still be dumb, just a rich dummy and a dumb sucker!
R Smith
March 19th, 2012
2:50 pm
It was a few years ago I read an article that the lottery commision hard huge bonuses twice a year. The one who picks up trash got smoething like $20,000 in bonuses at that time. Why are those bonuses given when we thought the money paid for education.
Just a thought.
plow
March 19th, 2012
2:56 pm
Georgia is a piece of work.
George Mathis
March 19th, 2012
3:03 pm
Good call on the $50 billion. I have corrected the article. $50 billion is the total spent by all states, not just Georgia.
Lt Col Razorback
March 19th, 2012
3:09 pm
Nonsuckers have ZERO chances to win.
Bob Decker
March 19th, 2012
3:19 pm
Yep, the dumber the state the higher the sales, the reason why Alabama is not on this list is because they have no lottery! lol. Must morons that play the pick 3 are unaware that the odds on hitting a number straight are 1000-1, and the payoff is only 500-1, so if 1,000 people in Georgia played 1,000 different numbers at 1 buck a piece, the state wins 500 bucks. Can a person be more stupid then that????
Alek
March 19th, 2012
3:20 pm
LOL – Is there really a need to be so snarky and condescending? If I were poor and wanted to have a little fun dreaming about what it would be like to be unbelievable rich, I think $1 would not be an outrageous cost for a day or 2 of the fun of imagining it. A 90 minute movie also provides an opportunity for some fantasy and imagination, for a LOT more money than a $1 – but I don’t see people jumping up and down saying the poor are being taken advantage of by $11 movie ticket prices!