Social Exchange Theory

    Cards (7)

    • Social Exchange Theory
      Thibault and Kelley
      • Economic assumptions of exchange
      • Commitment to a relationship dependent on profitability
      • profit = reward - costs
      • If rewards outweigh costs, relationship is worth maintaining
      • Rewards and costs are subjective
      • The value of rewards and costs might change over the course of a relationship
      1. Comparison Level
      = to judge whether a person is worth being in a relationship with. The rewards you think you deserve influenced by expectations, norms and the media. If we think the profit of a new relationship exceeds our CL, the relationship is worthwhile.
    • 2. Comparison Level for Alternatives
      = where the person weighs up a potential increase in rewards from a different partner, minus costs associated with ending current relationship. We will stay in a relationship as long as we believe it is more rewarding than alternatives.
    • 4 Stages of Relationship Development:
      Sampling Stage
      • explore costs and benefits of relationships by observing others
      Bargaining Stage
      • beginning of the relationship
      • start exchanging rewards/costs
      Commitment Stage
      • Costs and rewards become predictable
      • Relationship becomes stable
      Institutionalisation Stage
      • Partners are settled
      • Norms of relationship are firmly established
    • Eval : Strength
      Sprecher conducted a longitudinal study of 101 couples at uni and found CLalt was a strong predictor of commitment.
    • Eval : Weakness
      Argyle argues that people rarely are assessing their relationship for costs and rewards, or considering alternatives, before they feel dissatisfied, contradicting SET.
    • Eval : Weakness
      SET is highly reductionist as it bases the explanation purely on costs and rewards, suggesting a holistic approach may be better suited because of how complex relationships are.