Remittance inflows, democracy and economic freedom in developing countries: An approach based on democratic regimes
Description
Replication Package Paper Title: Remittance inflows, democracy and economic freedom in developing countries: An approach based on democratic regimes Authors: Relwendé SAWADOGO ( Université Joseph KI-ZERBO, Burkina Faso) Gervasio SEMEDO ( Université de Tours , Frnace) Pousseni BAKOUAN ( Université Virtuelle du Burkina ) Date: December 9, 2025 1. Overview This replication package provides all the publicly available data, code, and instructions required to reproduce the main empirical results of the above-mentioned research paper. The package is designed to facilitate transparency and enable independent verification of all statistical findings reported in the study.
Files
Steps to reproduce
README: Replication Package Paper Title Remittance inflows, democracy and economic freedom in developing countries: An approach based on democratic regimes Authors: Relwendé SAWADOGO ( Université Joseph KI-ZERBO, Burkina Faso) Gervasio SEMEDO ( Université de Tours , Frnace) Pousseni BAKOUAN ( Université Virtuelle du Burkina ) 1. Overview This replication package provides all the publicly available data, code, and instructions required to reproduce the main empirical results of the above-mentioned research paper. The package is designed to facilitate transparency and enable independent verification of all statistical findings reported in the study 2. Contents The replication package includes the following folders and files: 1. The file ‘DoFiles_RemittancesDemocracy.do’ contains the code used to conduct an empirical study. We have added explanatory notes to show how the results in each table are generated 2. ‘Data_Remittances_Democracy.dta’ contains the data used for the estimates. 3. “Data_Remittances.xlsx” contains the data in an Excel file for replication. 3. Software Requirements • Stata (version 19.0) All code is designed to be compatible with Stata 19 and earlier versions. No additional user packages are required for basic replication. 4. Data Acces and Restrictions 5. For the data, we use secondary data from the World Bank, the UNDP and the Fraser Institute databases. Any reader wishing to obtain the data can easily download it for replication.