Effect Of Budget Absorption On County Revenue Collection Amongst County Governments In Kenya
Abstract
Budget absorption is the rate of real expense out of the budgeted or planned expense of the budget
allocation. A budget is a component that ensures that planned or budgeted expense is utilized or
implemented. The study focused on the budget absorption constituted by budget allocation and
execution of expenditures, and revenue collection amongst county governments. In the context of
this study, expenditure was categorized into development and re-current expenditure. Budget
allocation refers to the funds released by the national government annually for the county
governments to spend on various sectors of its operations. Revenue collection was considered as
the total funds each county government collects annually as its own source of funds. Budget
absorption is related to the overall budgeting process hence it explains the rate at which each
county government distributes the allocated resources from the national government to various
cost centers. Secondary data was sourced from annual county governments’ budget
implementation reports from office of controller of budgets. Descriptive research design was used
to analyze the panel data collected using STATA software and the fixed effects model was
considered as appropriate to use. This study established that budget allocation is not significant
but positively related to revenue collection amongst county government. The study found out that
recurrent and development expenditure are significant on revenue collection. Development
expenditure has negative relationship to revenue collection while recurrent expenditure has a
positive relationship. The study recommended that the county governments should have clear
policies to guide on priority of expenditure. It also recommends that Development and recurrent
expenditure are significant on revenue collection hence there is need to have clear roadmap to
balance resource allocations.