Social Exchange Theory of Relationships: Examples & More

Key Takeaways

  • Social Exchange stipulates that people apply economic principles when evaluating relationships, either consciously or unconsciously, conducting cost-benefit analysis while also comparing alternatives.
  • Thibaut and Kelley assume that people try to maximize the rewards they obtain from a relationship and minimize the costs (the minimax principle).
  • According to social exchange theory, people will pursue relationships where rewards are greater than cost (net profit) and abandon those where costs are greater than profit (net loss). These profits can be measured in the short term or cumulatively. The value of costs and rewards is highly subjective.
  • Several scholars have expanded social exchange theory to describe power, social cohesion, and risk and uncertainty.
social exchange theory
Social exchange theory proposes that social behavior is the result of an exchange process in which people weigh the potential benefits and risks of relationships. People are motivated to maximize benefits and minimize costs, and relationships form, continue, or dissolve based on the perceived worth of the exchange.

What is social exchange theory?

According to social exchange theory (Thibault & Kelly, 1959), social behavior involves social exchanges where people are motivated by obtaining something of value (reward) in exchange for forfeiting something else of value (cost).

In social exchanges, like economic exchanges, people seek profit and are disturbed when there is no equity in an exchange or when others are rewarded more at the same costs incurred by the individual (Redmond, 2015).

Social exchange theory addresses three questions. Firstly, the question of how people make decisions about how much they are willing to give in exchange for a particular reward. Secondly, what factors influence people to pursue or terminate relationships.

And lastly, Why and whether people feel resentment when they feel they have put more effort into sustaining a relationship than their partner (Redmond, 2015).

Social exchange theory has its roots in Homan’s (1958) paper Social Behavior as Exchange. In this work, Homans contrasted the actions and exchanges of individuals to the actions of institutions.

He believed that individual behaviors and exchanges could affect the actions of institutions.

Blau’s (2017) Exchange and Power in Social Life drew on Homan’s focus on groups and institutions to lay the theoretical foundation for social exchange theory.

Unlike Humans, who emphasized psychology as the foundation of human decision-making, Blau’s vision of social behavior paralleled microeconomics. He labeled this vision with Homan’s term “social exchange theory” (Cook and Emerson, 1987).

Social exchange theory’s foundational principles have inspired a large number of alternate theories. These range from applications of social exchange theory in a specific concept to expanding upon the foundational principles of the theory.

Social Exchange Theory (SET) Explained

There are five guiding principles of social exchange theory (Redmond, 2015):

Principle 1: Social behavior can be explained in terms of costs, rewards, and exchanges: this principle’s importance comes from how it loosely applied economics to human decision-making.

Principle 2: People seek to maximize rewards and minimize costs in the pursuit of the greatest profit: this reflects a belief that people are generally motivated by their own self-interest, regardless of the decision.

A relationship that at one time seemed to be a high reward or low cost may shift to one with increasing costs and low rewards, causing that person to return to a more rewarding level or terminate the relationship.

Principle 3: Social interaction involves two parties, each exchanging a reward needed by the other person: in order to get rewards, people must exchange something better (Burns, 1973). This creates interdependent relationships.

Principle 4: Social exchange theory can be used to explain the development and management of interpersonal relationships: the economic principles underlying social exchange theory must be adapted so that they can be applied sociologically. This has led sociologists such as Altman and Taylor (1973) to create a social penetration theory to describe relational development.

Principle 5: Social exchanges affect the relationships among members of groups and organizations.
For decades, researchers such as Blau (2017) have discussed how the need for advice and assistance leads to exchanges among group members.

These fortify group structures, as those who are able to give advice are rewarded with respect, prestige, or possibly reciprocal action from the person receiving the assistance. Initially, seeking advice can form the basis of a mutually beneficial relationship; however, the equitable exchange needs to continue.

Costs vs. Benefits

Rewards are the amount of benefit that someone receives from a relationship. Rewards can be abstract (such as love and companionship), or concrete (such as goods and services) and are immediate or cumulative.

Ultimately, costs demotivate relationships; however, people must trade something of value (cost) for something they need or value (rewards). Like rewards, they can be either abstract or concrete and exist instantaneously or cumulatively.

In a relationship, people gain rewards (such as attention from their partner, sex, gifts, and a boost to their self-esteem) and incur costs (paying money for gifts, compromising on how to spend their time or stress).

There is also an opportunity cost in relationships, such as stress, arguments, compromises, and time commitments,

spending time with a partner that does not develop into a lasting relationship could have been spent with another partner with better long-term prospects.

How much value is placed on each cost and benefit is subjective and determined by the individual.

For example, whilst some people may want to spend as much time as possible with their partner in the early stages of the relationship and see this time together as a reward of the relationship, others may value their space and see extended periods spent together as more of a necessary investment to keep the other person happy.

Profit, as in economics, is rewards minus costs. Positive outcomes happen when there is a net profit, and negative outcomes happen when there is a net loss.

Thibault and Kelley (1959) also identified a number of different stages of a relationship:

  1. Sampling: partners consider the possible costs and benefits in the new relationship through direct or indirect interactions and compare it to other relationships available.
  2. Bargaining: partners exchange costs and benefits; they negotiate and identify what is the most profitable.
  3. Commitment: the relationship is stable and maintained by a predictable exchange of rewards.
  4. Institutionalization: partners have established norms in terms of costs and benefits. They now settle down.

Expectations and Comparison Levels

The comparison level (CL) in a relationship is a judgment of how much profit an individual is receiving (benefits minus costs). The acceptable CL needed to continue to pursue a relationship changes as a person matures and can be affected by a number of external and internal factors.

External factors may include the media (younger people may want more from a relationship after being socialized by images of romance on films and television), seeing friends and families in relationships (people who have divorced or separated parents may have a different CL to those with parents who are still married), or experiences from prior relationships, which have taught the person to expect more or less from a partner.

Internal perceptions of self-worth, such as self-esteem, will directly affect the CL that a person believes they are entitled to in a relationship.

Cumulative rewards and costs refer to the total rewards and costs someone has incurred over the course of a relationship. Profits add up in such a way that people will not immediately end relationships where immediate costs exceed rewards.

Not only do people assess the current profits of their relationships, but they also evaluate potential rewards and costs. Thibaut and Kelley (2017) believe that this is especially applicable at the beginning and during the stabilization phase of relationships.

Communications scholars such as Michael Sunnafrank have labeled this evaluation of the likelihood of positive and negative outcomes as predicted outcome values (1986).

Evaluating the Alternatives

Comparison level for alternatives (CLalt) refers to a person’s judgment of whether they could be getting fewer costs and greater rewards from another alternative relationship with another partner.

Steve Duck (1994) suggested that a person’s comparison level for alternatives is dependent on the level of reward and satisfaction in their current relationship. If the CL is positive, then the person may not consider the potential benefits of a relationship with another person.

People evaluate the costs and rewards of a relationship in terms of how they compare to expectations. People are likely to continue relationships that exceed their expectations and cut off those that fall short.

Research Examining Social Exchange Theory

Rusbult (1983)- carried out a longitudinal study over a seven-month period on heterosexual college students. The participants completed questionnaires every few weeks.

He found that satisfaction, investment, and alternatives predicted how committed they were to their relationship and whether it lasted.

He also found that during the “honeymoon” phase of the relationship, the balance of exchanges was ignored; however, later on, relationship costs were compared with the degree of satisfaction.

This supports the theory because it shows the importance of rewards in a relationship and comparison levels. It also suggests that the SET is best applied to the maintenance of relationships.

Hatfield (1989) studied people who felt over or under-benefited. The under-benefitted felt angry and deprived, while the over-benefited felt guilty and uncomfortable.

This supports SET theory by suggesting that regardless of whether individuals benefit, they do not wish to maintain a relationship that is unfair. This also highlights a weakness of SET; it ignores equity.

Power

A number of social exchange theorists have focused extensively on power. These theories picture power as being based on someone’s ability to control and manage another person by being able to meet their needs.

Emerson (1962) acknowledges that every relationship is about power and that withholding rewards or punishment can create negative actions (Blau, 2017).

For example, an employer can withhold a bonus from an employee until he has met a particular work standard.

Social structure can also define power relationships — the position of “employer” gives whoever is in that position the power to fire an employee, and this power originates exclusively from the position the employer holds.

Social structures involving power also necessitate unequal rewards — employers are usually paid more than employees. This system of power and unequal rewards is mediated by social exchanges that weigh rewards and costs.

Social structure is both a product of social exchanges and constrained by it (Cook and Whitmeyer, 1992). Power constraints, for example, who can interact with whom in an organization.

The study of how power impacts individuals’ access to other organization members is called exchange network theory (Redmond, 2015).

Central to Emerson’s framework of power is exchange relations as a unit of analysis. This shift, according to Turner (1978), made exchange theory less reductionist and tautological.

Rather than emphasizing the value of rewards to individuals, Emerson sought to understand the structure of the networks and groups that embed exchange relations. This emphasis on social relations differentiated Emerson from Homans and Blau (Cook and Emerson, 1987).

Risk and Uncertainty

Cook and Emerson (1978) established that people are more likely to form committed exchange relationships when they are in an uncertain environment, as this reduces how much these individuals seek alternative exchange relationships, reducing the inequalities of power in the exchange relationship.

Kollock (1995) also notes that uncertainty also creates higher feelings of trust in those in an exchange relationship.

Yamagishi et al. (1998) motivate this heightened trust. When there is low uncertainty, individuals are more likely to maximize their access to rewards by avoiding commitment.

However, in uncertain situations, people commit in order to avoid possible exploitation by new partners (Cook and Emerson, 1987). Different types of exchanges vary in how much risk and uncertainty is involved in them.

For example, exchanges that are reciprocal usually result in more trust than negotiated exchanges with binding agreements (Molm, 2010; Cook and Emerson, 1987).

Relational Cohesion

According to Lawler and Yoon (1993), positive emotions and then feelings of cohesion and solidarity develop from the belief that the outcomes of exchanges are positive and frequent.

People have fewer positive feelings and are less likely to commit to exchanges that do not generate positive feelings or that are infrequent.

Anthropological theories attempting to link exchange and solidarity have complexified social exchange theory by detailing exchange theory’s emotional basis.

It has connected social exchange theories to the study of social commitments (Lawler, 2009) and social order. For example, Lawler et al. (2008) have explained how reciprocal, negotiated, generalized, and productive exchange reflect emotional responses, how one thinks of oneself in the group, and attachment to the group.

These bonds are strong in joint activities and exchanges that promote a joint sense of responsibility.

Critical Evaluation

Operationalizing rewards and costs is hugely subjective, making comparisons between people and relationships in controlled settings very difficult.

Most studies that are used to support Social Exchange Theory account for this by using artificial procedures in laboratory settings, reducing the external validity of the findings.

Michael Argyle (1987) questions whether it is the CL that leads to dissatisfaction with the relationship or dissatisfaction that leads to this analysis. It may be that Social Exchange Theory serves as a justification for dissatisfaction rather than the cause of it.

Social Exchange Theory ignores the idea of social equity explained by the next relationship theory concerning equality in a relationship – would a partner really feel satisfied in a relationship where they received all of the rewards and their partner incurred all of the costs?

The theory predicts that if the costs outweigh the benefits, dissatisfaction will occur, and the relationship will end; however, it might be that when we are dissatisfied, we value less the benefits and value more the costs and start considering more attractive alternatives.

However, this does not take into account the size of the investment already put in the relationship (see Rusbult’s investment model of commitment).

Real-world application – Social Exchange Theory is used in Integrated Behavioral Couples Therapy, where couples are taught how to increase the proportion of positive exchanges and decrease negative exchanges.

Chritensen (2004) found that it led to a significant improvement in two third of the 40 couples who took part in the study.

This shows high mundane realism in terms of the practical, real-world application of the theory; therefore, SET is really beneficial for improving real relationships.

Many have criticized the original propositions and assumptions in Homan’s social exchange theory. Prominently, scholars have questioned the degree to which humans are rational and thus make conscious, continuous cost-benefit analyses in their analysis (Redmond, 2015).

Homan has also drawn criticism for his methodology, as his analysis of human behavior relies more on observations of, for example, how pigeons react to reinforcements than on studying human’s calculated decision-making and reality.

There has also been a considerable amount of confusion in social exchange theory about the variability of reward values.

Because ten dollars is a very different reward for, say, a homeless person and a millionaire, measuring reward value absolutely and being able to conduct social exchange theory research is problematic.

There are also symbolic rewards, where the cost of creating a reward (for example, baking cookies) is unrelated to the symbolic value of the gesture.

Homan’s social exchange theory also fails to address the restrictions created by roles and social structure.

Exchanges can happen without any option to negotiate, and actions carried out of the obligation of a role could be carried out without an individual thinking about the reward of each interaction. For example, an office worker may not think about how much he is being paid per hour to sit in a meeting because meetings are obligatory for him.

Finally, critics call Homan’s social exchange theory overly reductionist, as it only considers costs, rewards, profits, and exchanges in human interaction.

Although derivative research (such as those on power, equity, and interdependence) has complexified the theory, scholars still consider social exchange theory to be poor at meeting its goals (Redmond, 2015).

References

Argyle, M., & Crossland, J. (1987). The dimensions of positive emotions. British Journal of Social Psychology, 26(2), 127-137.

Altman, I., & Taylor, D. A. (1973). Social penetration: The development of interpersonal relationships: Holt, Rinehart & Winston.

Beebe, S. A., & Masterson, J. T. (2003). Communicating in small groups. Boston, MA.

Blau, P. M. (2017). Exchange and power in social life: Routledge.

Christensen, A., Atkins, D. C., Berns, S., Wheeler, J., Baucom, D. H., & Simpson, L. E. (2004). Traditional versus integrative behavioral couple therapy for significantly and chronically distressed married couples. Journal of consulting and clinical psychology, 72(2), 176.

Cook, K. S., & Emerson, R. M. (1978). Power, equity and commitment in exchange networks. American sociological review, 721-739.

Cook, K. S., & Emerson, R. M. (1987). Social exchange theory.

Emerson, R. M. (1962). Power-dependence relations. American sociological review, 31-41.

Homans, G. C. (1958). Social behavior as exchange. American journal of sociology, 63(6), 597-606.

Lawler, E. J., Thye, S. R., & Yoon, J. (2008). Social exchange and micro social order. American sociological review, 73(4), 519-542.

Lawler, E. J., Thye, S. R., & Yoon, J. (2009). Social commitments in a depersonalized world: Russell Sage Foundation.

Lawler, E. J., & Yoon, J. (1993). Power and the emergence of commitment behavior in negotiated exchange. American sociological review, 465-481.

Molm, L. D. (2010). The structure of reciprocity. Social psychology quarterly, 73(2), 119-131.

Redmond, M. V. (2015). Social exchange theory.

Rusbult, C. E. (1983). A longitudinal test of the investment model: The development (and deterioration) of satisfaction and commitment in heterosexual involvements. Journal of personality and social psychology, 45(1), 101.

Sunnafrank, M. (1986). Predicted outcome value during initial interactions: A reformulation of uncertainty reduction theory. Human Communication Research, 13(1), 3-33.

Thibaut, J. W., & Kelley, H. H. (1959). The social psychology of groups. Routledge.

Turner, J. H., & Turner, P. R. (1978). The structure of sociological theory: Dorsey Press Homewood, IL.

Yamagishi, T., Cook, K. S., & Watabe, M. (1998). Uncertainty, trust, and commitment formation in the United States and Japan. American journal of sociology, 104(1), AJSv104p165-194.

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Saul Mcleod, PhD

BSc (Hons) Psychology, MRes, PhD, University of Manchester

Educator, Researcher

Saul Mcleod, Ph.D., is a qualified psychology teacher with over 18 years experience of working in further and higher education. He has been published in peer-reviewed journals, including the Journal of Clinical Psychology.


Charlotte Nickerson

Research Assistant at Harvard University

Undergraduate at Harvard University

Charlotte Nickerson is a student at Harvard University obsessed with the intersection of mental health, productivity, and design.

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