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Revenue Decentralization and Healthcare Service Delivery in Turkana County, Kenya

James Kinjanzi Sirite (), Prof. David Minja () and Dr. Jane Njoroge ()

American Journal of Public Policy and Administration, 2025, vol. 10, issue 1, 1-11

Abstract: Purpose: This study examined the effect of revenue decentralization on healthcare service delivery in Turkana County, Kenya. Materials and Methods: Using a mixed-methods approach, the research collected data from 271 respondents, including county health and finance officials, hospital administrators, and community health representatives. Findings: The findings reveal that revenue decentralization significantly improves healthcare service delivery, with a one-unit increase in revenue decentralization leading to a 0.49-unit improvement in healthcare outcomes. However, delays in budget disbursement (averaging 5.11 months) and reliance on external revenue sources (36.9% tax autonomy) highlight challenges in financial sustainability and resource allocation. Qualitative responses underscore both the benefits of increased autonomy and access to funding, as well as the drawbacks of concentrated financing and disparities in rural healthcare access. The study concludes that optimizing tax autonomy mechanisms, strengthening intergovernmental grants, and improving financial management are critical to enhancing the positive effects of revenue decentralization. These findings contribute to the broader discourse on fiscal decentralization and its potential to address healthcare inequities in marginalized regions. Unique Contribution to Theory, Practice and Policy: To improve healthcare in Turkana County, enhance revenue decentralization by refining tax autonomy, increasing equitable intergovernmental grants, and addressing rural disparities. Implement 'nomadic health vouchers' using 15% of decentralized revenues and 'fiscal health compacts' to reduce budget delays. Ensure autonomy, accountability via blockchain, and drought-responsive budgets work together to boost accessibility and patient support, transforming fiscal policy into a tool for healthcare justice, especially for mothers and herders facing long waits and travel for care.

Keywords: Revenue decentralization; Healthcare service delivery (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025
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