INFLUENCE OF FINANCIAL RESOURCES ON SERVICE DELIVERY AT NATIONAL YOUTH SERVICE, KERIO VALLEY, KENYA
Abstract
This study examined the influence of financial resources on service delivery at the National Youth Service (NYS)
Kerio Valley, Kenya, a critical institution for youth training and community development facing challenges due to
inefficient financial resource management. Grounded in the Financial Resource Dependence Theory, a causal research
design was adopted to assess the effect of budgeting processes, expenditure management, and financial sustainability
on client satisfaction, timeliness, and service quality. Data was collected from 166 of 205 targeted NYS employees
(80.98% response rate) using stratified random sampling and structured Likert-scale questionnaires, analyzed with
SPSS Version 29 through descriptive statistics, Pearson correlation, and simple linear regression. Findings revealed
low perceptions of financial resource management (Mean=2.36, SD=1.223), with significant gaps in return-oninvestment
evaluation (Mean=2.25, SD=1.208), yet strong service delivery outcomes (Mean=3.84, SD=1.055),
indicating organizational resilience. A strong positive correlation (r=0.802, p<0.05) and significant regression
coefficient (B=0.322, p=0.001) confirmed that financial resources significantly enhance service delivery, leading to
the rejection of the null hypothesis. The study concludes that while financial resource management is inadequate,
improvements in budgeting, expenditure control, and sustainability can significantly boost service outcomes.
Recommendations include adopting participatory budgeting, implementing digital expenditure tracking, conducting
regular financial audits, and enhancing staff training to ensure efficient resource use and sustained service delivery
in a resource-constrained semi-arid context.
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