If you read Indian policy news closely, a strange pattern starts to emerge.
A new telecom regulation drops. A climate policy announcement follows. A defence procurement controversy breaks. Across newspapers, digital portals, and TV websites, the same expert appears. Sometimes with the same designation. Often with near‑identical phrasing. Occasionally with quotes that feel oddly pre‑packaged.
At first glance, this looks like coincidence. India has a relatively small pool of policy experts, and journalists work under tight deadlines. But when you compare coverage side by side, the repetition becomes too precise to ignore.
This article examines a largely invisible layer of modern newsmaking in India: think‑tank PR syndication. It is not about fake news or outright propaganda. It is about how agenda setting increasingly happens before a reporter even picks up the phone.
The pattern hiding in plain sight
Consider how policy news is typically reported.
A ministry releases a draft bill. A government spokesperson gives a statement. To balance the story, reporters add a quote from an “independent expert” or a “policy analyst.” This quote often provides legitimacy, context, and interpretive framing.
Now compare five or ten articles on the same announcement from different outlets. In many cases:
- The same expert appears across multiple publications within hours
- The quotes use strikingly similar language
- The expert’s institutional affiliation is prominently highlighted
- Alternative or dissenting expert voices are missing
This is not accidental. It is the result of organized expert distribution systems operated by think tanks, policy advocacy groups, and strategic communications firms.
How think‑tank PR syndication actually works
Most people imagine think tanks as quiet research institutions publishing dense PDFs. In reality, many operate sophisticated media operations.
Step 1: Research to talking points
When a policy issue is imminent, such as a data protection law or defence procurement, think tanks prepare:
- Executive summaries optimized for journalists
- Pre‑written expert reactions to expected developments
- One‑line quotable statements with clear normative framing
These are often finalized before the policy announcement is public.
Step 2: Media mailing lists and embargo briefings
Think tanks maintain curated lists of reporters across beats. When news breaks, journalists receive:
- “Instant reactions” from named experts
- Offers for quick quotes over WhatsApp or email
- Embargoed briefings with suggested angles
Under deadline pressure, these quotes become convenient and reliable.
Step 3: Quote recycling across outlets
Because the same material is distributed to dozens of reporters simultaneously, identical or near‑identical quotes appear across:
- National newspapers
- Digital‑only news portals
- TV channel websites
The effect is artificial consensus.
Why journalists use these quotes even when they know better
It is tempting to blame reporters. That would be unfair and inaccurate.
Structural pressures in Indian newsrooms
Indian journalism today faces:
- Shrinking newsroom budgets
- Fewer specialized policy reporters
- Faster publishing cycles driven by SEO and social media
According to the Reuters Institute Digital News Report 2023, Indian journalists report some of the highest time pressures globally, with digital output demands rising year on year.
Source: https://www.digitalnewsreport.org/
In this environment, think‑tank syndication solves three problems at once:
- Speed: Quotes are ready instantly
- Credibility: Think tanks carry perceived neutrality
- Safety: Institutional voices are less risky than independent freelancers
The illusion of independence
The most concerning aspect is not coordination. It is mislabeling.
Experts are often described as:
- “Independent policy analyst”
- “Senior fellow at a leading think tank”
- “Governance expert”
What is rarely disclosed:
- Funding sources of the think tank
- Past advisory roles to government ministries
- Corporate or foreign funding links
In India, think tanks are not required to disclose funding in media appearances.
Contrast this with the United States, where investigations by ProPublica and The New York Times have repeatedly shown how undisclosed funding shapes policy advocacy.
Example: ProPublica’s reporting on fossil fuel funded think tanks influencing climate coverage
https://www.propublica.org/series/climate-change
India lacks an equivalent disclosure norm.
Real examples from Indian policy coverage
Data protection and privacy
During coverage of the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023, several Indian outlets quoted the same small set of experts praising the bill’s “balanced approach.”
A comparison of articles from:
- The Economic Times
- Business Standard
- Hindustan Times
revealed overlapping expert voices using similar language around innovation and ease of business.
Civil society critiques around surveillance exemptions appeared far less frequently.
Defence procurement and national security
On defence acquisitions, especially fighter jet deals or indigenisation policies, the same defence analysts repeatedly appear across TV and print.
Many of these analysts are affiliated with think tanks that receive funding from defence manufacturers or have advisory links to the Ministry of Defence.
Yet disclosures are rarely provided.
Climate and energy policy
Coverage of India’s energy transition often features experts from energy policy think tanks emphasizing feasibility and growth narratives.
Critical voices on coal expansion or environmental justice tend to be underrepresented, despite strong academic literature.
How this shapes public understanding
Think‑tank PR syndication does not tell journalists what to write. It subtly shapes what is thinkable.
Agenda setting through repetition
When the same expert framing appears across multiple outlets, readers infer:
- This is the mainstream view
- Alternative perspectives are fringe
- Policy debate is settled
This aligns with classic agenda‑setting theory in media studies.
Source: McCombs and Shaw, “The Agenda‑Setting Function of Mass Media”
https://www.jstor.org/stable/2747787
Narrowing of debate
Even when articles appear balanced, the range of viewpoints is constrained.
Instead of:
- Pro‑government vs critical civil society
We get:
- Government position vs think‑tank interpretation that subtly reinforces it
Detecting syndication patterns yourself
You do not need specialized tools to notice this. Some practical techniques:
1. Quote comparison
Copy expert quotes from multiple articles and compare phrasing. Near‑identical sentences are a strong signal.
2. Expert frequency tracking
Notice which experts appear repeatedly across different outlets within short time spans.
3. Institutional clustering
Check whether multiple quoted experts belong to the same think tank ecosystem.
4. Missing counter‑voices
Ask which stakeholders are absent: grassroots groups, independent academics, affected communities.
Media literacy platforms and analytical tools, including projects like The Balanced News, have begun automating some of this comparison work to make patterns more visible to readers.
Is this unethical journalism?
Not necessarily. But it is incomplete journalism.
Think tanks play a legitimate role in policy analysis. The problem arises when:
- Their advocacy role is obscured
- Their funding is undisclosed
- Their perspectives crowd out others
The ethical issue is transparency, not participation.
What better disclosure could look like
Small changes could significantly improve trust:
- Standard disclosure lines for think‑tank affiliations
- Mention of funding sectors when relevant
- Greater diversity of expert sourcing
Internationally, some outlets already do this.
Example: The Guardian’s disclosure practices for expert commentators
https://www.theguardian.com/info/2015/sep/15/editorial-code
Indian newsrooms could adopt similar norms without sacrificing speed.
Why this matters more in India
India’s policy environment is complex, fast‑moving, and highly consequential.
From digital rights to climate adaptation, policy narratives shape:
- Public opinion
- Judicial interpretation
- Electoral discourse
When expert commentary is quietly centralized, democratic deliberation suffers.
Toward a more literate news ecosystem
The solution is not to distrust experts. It is to contextualize them.
Readers can:
- Compare multiple sources
- Question repeated narratives
- Seek original research alongside media coverage
Journalists can:
- Broaden expert networks
- Push for institutional transparency
- Acknowledge uncertainty
And platforms focused on media literacy, such as The Balanced News, can help surface patterns that are otherwise invisible at scale by comparing sources and highlighting narrative repetition.
Conclusion
The repeated appearance of the same “independent expert” is not a conspiracy. It is a system.
A system built on time pressure, institutional credibility, and strategic communication.
Understanding this system does not make you cynical. It makes you a more informed reader.
And in a democracy as large and diverse as India’s, informed reading is not optional. It is essential.
Originally published on The Balanced News
Sources
- Reuters Institute Digital News Report 2023: https://www.digitalnewsreport.org/
- ProPublica Climate Change Investigations: https://www.propublica.org/series/climate-change
- McCombs and Shaw, Agenda‑Setting Theory: https://www.jstor.org/stable/2747787
- The Guardian Editorial Code: https://www.theguardian.com/info/2015/sep/15/editorial-code
- Digital Personal Data Protection Act coverage, Economic Times: https://economictimes.indiatimes.com
- Business Standard policy coverage: https://www.business-standard.com
- Hindustan Times policy news: https://www.hindustantimes.com
Originally published on The Balanced News
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