Abstract:
Revenue management as far as public institutions are
concerned is traceable in the early 18th and later 19th when
Great Britain initiated some of its projects that required
continuous flow of resources from the subjects in form of
taxes (Rose, 1950). The need for public revenues required
that more taxes become imminent, which got subjects
concerned as to how public revenues realized from taxes
were managed (Agrawal & Ferguson, 2007).
Description:
Key findings suggested a positive significant relationship
between revenue enhancement planning (.530**),
between the implementation of the revenue enhancement
plan (.342**), and between revenue expenditure control
(.472**) and service delivery.