The two statements that apply to the effects of the Great Depression on Georgians are:
- Georgia's economy was suffering so badly that, by 1930, the state government could not pay its own bills.
- Many rural Georgians were so used to poverty due to the state's poor economy in the late 1920s that they had hardly noticed the Great Depression.
These points highlight the severe economic struggles faced by Georgians during the Great Depression, particularly in rural areas, where poverty was already prevalent.