The correct answer to this open question is the following.
You forgot to attach the illustration and the options for this question. However, we can say the following.
The illustration shows a plan for the city of Washington from the late 1700s. What resulted from this plan was that "There were not enough funds for the federal government to create a national capital and pay its debts."
Here, we are talking about the plan known as the "L'Enfant Plan" of 1791. It was a plan to urbanize the zone of what today is Washington D.C. and was designed by a close man of United States President George Washington. His name was Pierre L'Enfant. He suggested that the new capital of the country could be located next to the Potomac River for the many advantages it generated for trade and as a means of transportation.
L'Enfant was a French architect that had known Washington during the years of the Continental Army that fought against the British troops during the Revolutionary War.