Not sure I know exactly what you are looking for. Can you please show us the exact wording of the question.
At the main disconnect, the neutral and equipment ground are bonded together. Beyond that, the equipment ground and neutral continue to the grounding electrode system and the resistance to earth of that system in relationship to the POCO transformer will always vary based on distance, soil conditions, etc. This will only come into effect with a loss of neutral. If our grounds had the same resistance to the POCO transformer as the neutral, then when a home lost a neutral, it would not be immediately noticed as the ground would pick up the load depending on where the neutral was lost such as at the meter base in a typical home installation. Most losses of neutral at the meter base are immediately recognized and create problems since the resistance of the GES to the POCO transformer though the soil is rarely if ever 0 ohms.
Of course your question may be related to voltage drop so please clarify.
Great question.