Think Tanks and Lobbyists
Organisations that produce policy research to influence government thinking (think tanks) and professional advocates who lobby on behalf of clients for policy changes (lobbyists).
Real World
The Institute of Economic Affairs heavily promoted free-market ideas throughout the 1970s that directly shaped Thatcher's economic policies, while lobbying firm Rud Pedersen represents corporate clients directly to government ministers — illustrating the distinction between idea-generation and paid advocacy.
Exam Focus
Distinguish think tanks from lobbyists in your answer — conflating them loses marks; think tanks produce research, lobbyists advocate for paying clients.
How well did you know this?