The Influence of Financial Resource Management Strategies on the Performance of Donor-Funded HIV Programs in Kenya: An Empirical Analysis
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.58216/kjri.v16i2.752Keywords:
Financial Resource Management, Organizational Performance, HIV Programmes , Donor-Funded Health Systems, Public Financial ManagementAbstract
This study interrogates the extent to which Financial Resource Management Strategies function as a determinant of organizational performance within donor-funded HIV programs in Kenya, in the context of shifting global health financing and increasing domestic sustainability pressures. Anchored in a cross-sectional descriptive correlational design, data were obtained from 285 program and finance personnel across implementing organizations and analyzed using both descriptive and inferential statistical techniques. Financial Resource Management was operationalized as a multidimensional construct encompassing planning and allocation, funding adequacy, timeliness of disbursement, and accessibility of funds. The descriptive findings reveal a structurally established but functionally uneven financial governance architecture, characterized by relatively strong planning systems and internal fund utilization processes, contrasted with persistent weaknesses in funding predictability and financial systems integration. Regression results indicate a positive and statistically significant relationship between Financial Resource Management Strategies and organizational performance (β = 0.4177, p < 0.001), with the model explaining 14.63% of the variance, thereby confirming financial governance as a substantive but partial predictor of performance. Qualitative evidence further elucidates this relationship, demonstrating that while structured financial planning enhances coordination and accountability, its performance effects are mediated by systemic bottlenecks including delayed disbursements, procedural rigidity, and fragmented financial platforms. The study advances the argument that financial resource management in donor-funded health systems operates as a conditional capability, whose effectiveness depends not on its presence alone but on its integration, responsiveness, and alignment with broader institutional and funding dynamics. These findings reposition financial governance as a critical, yet contextually bounded, lever for sustaining HIV program performance under conditions of financing transition.
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Copyright (c) 2026 Mercy Njeru, Edward Musebe, Gabriel Okello

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