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Media-Appearance of Think Tanks |


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To disseminate their respective ideologies think tanks produce vast amounts of publications, including research reports, newsletters, magazines and books. Although the quality of their "research findings" sometimes is of questionably scientific value their "experts" are regularly quoted in the print-media and also appear on television and radio.
Nevertheless, in most cases, when representatives of think tanks are used as experts on a topic, they are introduced as independent scholars, hiding the fact, that they are related to certain ideologies. "When a think tank representative is used as an expert on a topic, often that person's media-framed credibility may be measured by the ideological label attached to them. By failing to politically identify representatives of think tanks, or identify the financial base of think tanks, major media deprive their audiences of an important context for evaluating the opinions offered, implying that think tank "experts" are neutral sources without any ideological predispositions." (Michael Dolny)

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Keynesian Economics
In the 1930s John Maynard Keynes formulated the theory of income determination. He was interested in the level of national income and the volume of employment rather than in the equilibrium of the firm or the allocation of resources. Typical aspects of Keynsianism are: Government management of the wage, the welfare state and "development". Popular until the 1960s Keynsianism was thereafter widely replaced by neoliberalism.
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