From a stability perspective there's likely no difference insofar as the stall response will be bad regardless. You can have complex wing geometry that stalls gracefully, for instance carbon general aviation aircraft have similar traits but require much cleaner stall response for certification generally.
BTW since it's been tossed around a lot, good stall response is when the whole wing stalls at the same time and both wings tend to stall together, therefore you get a clean lurch downward in a straight predictable line. Bad stall response is one part of one wing stalling before the rest such that the wing drops and the plane has to be fought to avoid a spin or if extreme enough, a tail slide or extreme side slip.