Dhaka, June 2 -- Following the discussion on the architecture of newspaper influence (The Financial Express, May 22, 2026), an equally important question emerges: who produces the analytical journalism capable of generating such influence in the first place? If newspapers constitute part of a society's cognitive infrastructure, then analytical journalists themselves constitute the intellectual engines that generate the interpretive capacity sustaining that infrastructure.

Modern societies are increasingly shaped not merely by events themselves, but by how those events are interpreted, amplified, interconnected, and understood. Inflation, artificial intelligence, climate change, debt crises, geopolitical conflicts, migration pressures, te...