If you're talking about simple compounds, your question does not make sense. The aromatic ring just donates electrons to electron-withdrawing substituents, and accepts electrons from electron-donating ones. That's how it is, and there's nothing easy or difficult about either accepting or donating electrons.
It is only in comparing different aromatic rings that you'll find that electron-poor rings are less inclined to give up electrons, while electron-rich rings won't easily accept electrons. Just check up on aromatic substitution reactions to see what happens when you try, for example, to do a nitration of benzene, pyridine and pyrimidine. Conversely, try and figure out why the Chichibabin reaction works on pyridine, but not benzene.