The Impact of Number Superstition on Condominium Prices in Singapore
The Economics of Luckiness: The Impact of Number Superstition on Condominium Prices in Singapore Jennifer Ho Submitted to the Department of Economics of Amherst College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Bachelor of Arts with Honors Thesis Advisors: Jessica Reyes, Christopher Kingston, Jun Ishii April 23, 2008 Acknowledgements To Professor Jessica Reyes, without whose help this thesis would not exist, and who always knew the right combination between being strict and being encouraging, To my parents, who performed miracles with data research, To Professors Christopher Kingston and Jun Ishii, who advised this thesis in its formative stages, To Professor Frank Westhoff, who always had a quick answer to an urgent question, despite being officially on leave, To Jeanne Reinle, whose coffee machine made life in the econ lab productive, whose conversation kept it interesting, whose food kept me from starving, and who drove me all the way home to King on rainy days, To Fabian Slonimczyk, who understood frighteningly well the mysteries of STATA, To the Amherst College Economics Department, To Mr. James Stanley and Mr. Ted Hartsoe, without whose excellent teaching I would not have been an econ major, To Leslie Anne Vallandingham Cassidy, Claire Morrison, Roshni Rathi, Mee-Sun Song, Erin Simpler, and Anne Augustine, who were excellent dinner companions and who understood firsthand how painful the process could sometimes be, To Michael Badain for the limerick on the following page, To the Fall 2007 class of Economics 77, And to Jacob Birk, who was a crucial late-night work buddy and who drew my attention to the (very apt) following quote: Children need encouragement.
[Show full text]