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The Foundations of Trust
It is no secret that public trust in politicians and the political system has declined
markedly in recent decades. According to national surveys, many Americans no longer trust
elected officials to keep their promises or to look out for interests of ordinary
citizens. The proportion of those who say they have "hardly any" confidence in
the people running the executive branch of the federal government rose from 18 percent in
1973 to 35 percent in 1994. Over the same time period, the number expressing low
confidence in leaders of Congress increased from 15 percent to 40 percent.
But Americans are not only losing faith in politicians and other leaders. They are also
less willing now than in the past to believe that people in general can be trusted.
For example, the proportion agreeing that "most people can be trusted" fell from
55 percent in 1960 to 34 percent in 1994, while the proportion saying "you can't be
too careful in dealing with people" rose from 40 percent in 1960 to 61 percent in
1994. Taken at face value, these surveys point to growing fears -- about crime, hatred,
and selfishness -- and to rising cynicism about human nature. Viewed more closely, they
suggest that Americans are losing the capacity to work with one another, to cooperate and
to give each other the benefit of the doubt.
Of course, questions can be raised about these findings. It may be that the surveys are
biased, eliciting responses that oversimplify people's own understandings of trust. It may
be the case, too, that people have good reasons for exercising caution in their dealings
with others. Still, if trust is declining in the United States, then one of the ways to
renew civil society may be to understand better the conditions that facilitate trust and
the ones that erode it. In what follows, I consider both the relevant survey data and the
results of interviews in which people spoke in detail about their civic activities and
beliefs, including some of their views about trust.
What Surveys Show
Though newspaper articles about trust tend to report aggregate measures, the evidence
indicates that some groups in our society are more trusting than others. For example,
Robert Putnam finds higher levels of trust among people with higher levels of education.
Whites are more likely than blacks to give trusting responses, and people who hold
memberships in voluntary associations are more trusting than non-members.
Eric Uslaner's analysis of the data suggests that the standard survey question about
trust can almost be thought of as a measure of optimism: people who have more advantages
in life and who are more confident about their futures have more reasons to be optimistic
and thus are more likely to give trusting responses. By implication, trust may be
declining because many Americans do not feel as confident about the future in terms of
economic opportunities as they did a few decades ago.
Two other interpretations of trends in levels of trust also find support in the
available data. First, some of the erosion in social trust is attributable to political
scandals specifically, as well as to declining confidence in public leaders more
generally. For example, National Election Survey questions about trust in people show
abrupt declines during the late 1960s and early 1970s, when the Vietnam war and Watergate
were raising public concern about national leaders. Other surveys conducted in those years
show that large numbers actually believed their trust had been shaken by Watergate. The
National Election data also show that some of the decline in generalized trust can be
explained statistically by the decline in confidence in government officials.
The other interpretation of trends in generalized trust comes from looking more closely
at its relationship with education. In 1973, the largest differences in trust were between
respondents who had graduated from high school and those who had not. By 1994, this
difference had shrunk, but that between college graduates and high school graduates had
increased. High school graduates in 1994 were about as likely to be trusting as those
without high school degrees had been in 1973, while college graduates in 1994 resembled
high school graduates in 1973. In addition, the 1994 data show that college graduates were
significantly less likely to trust than were respondents with graduate degrees, whereas in
1973 this difference was not significant.
These results confirm what other studies of college effects have long suggested: Higher
education appears to be a measure of relative standing in the society, more so than
a cognitive experience that shapes people's attitudes absolutely. As the proportion of
Americans with college and postgraduate degrees has expanded, the large number who have
high school degrees or less have become more disadvantaged, and their declining sense of
their own opportunities appears to be reflected in a lower likelihood of giving optimistic
responses to questions about trust. This is not to deny that even the most privileged in
terms of education have also become somewhat less trusting. But it does appear that trust
has fallen partly because people with the lowest levels of education have become more
similar to one another in their views about trust, while there are greater differentials
between these people and those with higher levels of education.
A second data set that permits further analysis of trust comes from a 1982 survey which
asked adults in a representative national sample how they perceived themselves. One
of the questions asked people to rate themselves on a seven-point scale anchored at one
end by the word "dependable" and at the other by the word
"undependable." This question is conceptually interesting because, as I shall
suggest below, many people's willingness to trust others seems to be a reflection of
whether or not they believe they can trust themselves.
The variables that are significantly associated with describing oneself as dependable
are essentially the same as those that in other surveys correlate with saying that most
people can be trusted. Having a college degree, being white, having an above-average
family income, owning one's home, and scoring higher on a self-esteem scale are all
associated with higher probabilities of regarding oneself as dependable (as is civic
participation, as measured by volunteering to help the poor and writing letters to public
officials). I take these findings as added evidence that trust is influenced by personal
circumstances. If generalized trust has been declining, the reason may not be simply that
people believe others are having more difficulty living up to their agreements, or
even because their faith in politicians has been shaken. It has probably declined partly
because people are less confident in their own capacities to hold up their share of the
bargain. We shall have more opportunity to consider this possibility in looking at the
qualitative data.
The final survey from which I have been able to draw observations on trust is my own
1992 national survey of 1,000 members of small support groups, from Bible study circles to
twelve-step and self-help groups. This survey, unlike those that measure trust in
unspecified "people," asked respondents about trust in a specific context,
focusing on the trust that respondents place in fellow members.
The results show that the intimate and encompassing interaction characteristic of
support groups -- in which people may eat together, sing, pray, and help others in their
community -- is associated with higher levels of trust. Other factors that did not
show significant relationships with trust were engaging in sports activities together
(contrary to arguments about the beneficial effects of bowling leagues), discussing social
or political issues, having elected officers, having an agenda or schedule, and having
business meetings. In short, informal interaction was conducive to trust, but formal
structure was unrelated to trust.
The study also suggests a reason why trust may be declining in the wider society.
People in heterogeneous groups -- especially ones that included diverse political views
and mixed religious views -- were less likely to rate their groups high on trust than were
people in homogeneous groups. From this finding, it may be reasonable to suspect that
trust among the public at large has suffered as a result of acrimony between political or
religious factions; it may also have been influenced by the growing diversity of the
population in ethnic identities, lifestyles, and values.
In sum, the various surveys show that opportunities to realize one's expectations are
conducive to trust, whereas inequality and disadvantage are not. Perceptions of one's own
reliability are an important consideration, and social interaction appears to enhance
trust. The data also indicate that trust is always conditional: Nobody trusts everyone all
the time. It is thus important to turn to qualitative data to see how people understand
the conditions under which they can and cannot trust others. The goal is to identify the
different kinds of mental frames that people bring to bear in deciding when and
whether to trust.
Trust from Within
For some people, as the surveys suggest, trust in others depends on a prior belief in
their own trustworthiness. As one man put it, "I feel if I can be trusted, I can
trust other people. Throughout my lifetime I've found that to be true, that if you are up
and above and honest with people, they will return that respect." His statement
focuses more on himself than on any particular characteristic of others. It is also
significant that he associates trustworthiness with being honest, rather than with
being dependable -- making good on everything he promises. This allows him to see being
trustworthy as entirely under his own control, rather than subject to contingencies that
might prevent him from fulfilling other people's expectations.
Such seemingly minimal conditions can nevertheless become problematic. In other
research, I have found that people are not at all sure (or in agreement) about what it means
to be honest. For many, honesty is largely a subjective self-assessment that says, in
effect, you are honest if you feel that you are honest. In the absence of clearer external
standards, many people feel that they are operating largely within gray areas, especially
in business or in their professional lives. As a result, they wonder whether or not they
are truly honest.
Generally, respondents who emphasized certain characteristics of their own as the
condition for trusting others relied on one of three frames. The first is illustrated by
the man we have just been considering. It is aptly described as a frame that emphasizes self-knowledge
-- believing, for example, that you are honest, civil, and capable of judging people.
Others felt certain that they could keep their mouths shut when they needed to, or that
they would not make a promise they could not keep.
A second frame emphasizes personal experience. For example, a 44-year-old
newspaper editor attributed his trustfulness to his growing up in a neighborhood where
people knew one another and helped one another. This man did not simply generalize from
his childhood experience by assuming that virtually everyone he runs into in his present
life can be trusted. Rather, he observed that his experiences had shaped him so that he is
simply a trusting person.
The third frame explains trustfulness as a leap of faith on the part of the
person doing the trusting. Unlike the first two, this frame implicitly assumes that trust
may not be rational (at least not in terms of what one knows about how people behave), but
argues that being trusting is still a good way to live. One woman who works as an artist
told us that she trusts most people, even though she has been "burned" a few
times and is not naive. She explained her reason for trusting in terms of a faith
commitment that causes her to focus on an inner self: "What I'm seeing is what's
going on inside that person, I behold the Christ in you, the good stuff that connects us
all, that's in all of us. That's where I connect into people." But other respondents
defended their leap of faith on pragmatic grounds; they said they were simply happier or
found they could get along better if they decided to be trusting.
Objects of Trust
In contrast to those who made trust depend on something in themselves, most of the
people we talked to focused on attributes and conditions of those who would or would not
qualify as objects of trust. The most common of these conditions was also the most
straightforward: people said they would trust others if those others had already proved to
be reliable. In other words, trust depended on a rational assessment of someone's performance
in the past and the likelihood that the future would hold similar performances by that
person or by similar persons. This kind of trust, it should be noted, is highly contingent
on the kind of people toward whom it is directed. Whereas a frame that emphasizes one's
own trustworthiness suggests an inclination to trust most people under most circumstances,
this one is more limited.
Another frame that permits people to say they can trust others emphasizes resources.
Objects of trust who have sufficient resources to carry through on their promises and to
behave reliably are said to be trustworthy; in contrast, people with limited resources
should perhaps not be trusted. A 43-year-old woman who manages a small company illustrated
this frame when she said that her employees can generally be trusted because her firm
supplies them with the resources they need to fulfill their responsibilities. She
generalized from this example, saying, "If you give people responsibility and try and
give them as many tools as you possibly can, they won't disappoint you."
Significantly, this is a frame that may influence people's judgments of political
leaders as well as workers or friends. One of our respondents, a draftsman in his fifties,
had concluded that public officials were unreliable, and produced this explanation of
their failure to perform up to the public's expectations: "I think they honestly
believe that when they get in there they're going to be able to do all these things for
you. My feeling is once they are elected and they're in the office, they learn the reality
of those offices and they find out that things aren't as easily done as they think they
are." Like many of the people we talked to, the draftsman denied that his qualified
trust in politicians should be taken as incipient cynicism. He said he was merely being
realistic in his expectations of what officials could and could not do.
The main alternatives to frames that emphasize reliable performance are frames that
emphasize something about the self of the person being trusted. These frames come
in several variants. One of the most common argues simply that you can trust people better
if you know them well. It says nothing about whether or not these people have performed
reliably in the past -- only that you know them well enough to assume that they are people
of character, people who are somewhat like yourself in their values and their respect for
common norms of decency.
Some respondents were more specific about what it is in other people that makes them
seem trustworthy. One frame (which was hinted at by the woman who focuses on the
"Christ" in other people) draws a distinction between an inner self that is
presumed to be more trustworthy and an outer self that may be more calculating, devious,
or unreliable. The people who can be trusted are those who have been willing to disclose
something about this inner self.
This emphasis on self-disclosure means, perhaps obviously, that people are more likely
to trust those with whom they have developed some intimacy. Yet this frame (like the one
that emphasizes resources) sometimes figures in people's judgments of political leaders.
For example, some of our respondents focus less on the official acts of politicians than
on biographical details, body language, reports of affairs, and the use or absence of
certain words. They are very much aware of their leaders' personal foibles, and base their
opinions on characteristics that may have little to do with performance in office.
Alternatives to Trust
Though the people in our study often expressed concern about mistrust, many of them had
found ways to negotiate their lives without being immobilized by it. They did so by
relying on other mechanisms, such as laws, regulations, and markets, to minimize risk. For
example, the head of a baby-sitting cooperative in New Jersey told us that although her
organization had 200 members, only 8 families regularly used it. The reason, she thought,
was that most of the members did not trust the other members well enough to feel
comfortable leaving their children with them. Although she tried to build trust by having
parties and other "get acquainted" meetings, most of the members said they
didn't have time for such activities. Because they enjoyed upper-middle-class incomes,
they used for-profit day care centers instead.
In a case like this, one could say that trust was being redirected from neighbors to
for-profit day care centers. But this is not how the woman herself saw it. In her view,
trust is "a personal thing." Like many of the people we interviewed, she makes
it conditional on knowing something about the private life -- the inner self -- of another
person. It seems better to her to say that people have confidence in day care
centers. Trust is not at issue; confidence rests on knowing that these centers are
licensed by the state, are governed by a number of laws and regulations, and must do their
jobs well if they are to stay in business.
Political mistrust can elicit a similar response: Americans mistrust individual
politicians but find other ways to get on with their lives. Some say it is healthy to be
skeptical toward politicians, because critical questions get raised or because mistrust
prevents politicians from assuming too much power. For many of the people we interviewed,
mistrust was more of an irritation than a profound complaint because they felt the
political system should not be doing very much anyway. Some believed that private
volunteer organizations were better suited to solving social problems. Following the 1996
election, during which high levels of mistrust toward the leading candidates were
registered, the stock market soared to record highs; analysts attributed the increases to
investors who saw that a divided government incapable of inspiring confidence would do
little to upset their expectations.
Implications for Civic Renewal
The foregoing nevertheless suggests that trust is important enough that people are
prepared to talk about it, generally in more complex ways than have been captured in
public opinion polls. For most people, trust is not simply a matter of making rational
calculations about the possibility of benefiting by cooperating with someone else. Social
scientists who reduce the study of trust to questions about rational choice, and who argue
that it has nothing to do with moral discourse, miss this point. In interviews, people
bring moral frameworks directly to bear on their thinking about trust, talking about how
it is simply good to trust others, how trust depends on moral character, and how you have
a moral obligation to fulfill the expectations of those who have placed trust in you. Even
if trust is taken as nothing more than an expectation of how someone will behave, it is
invariably conditioned by assumptions about one's own honesty, whether or not promises are
morally binding, and how much the behavior of individuals is likely to be shaped by their
moral commitments.
Our surveys suggest that deliberate repair work needs to be done to restore trust that
has been damaged by broken promises, disrupted relationships, and fragmented self-images.
Clearly, it is not enough to argue that trust will be restored simply by getting people to
join bowling leagues and other civic organizations. Many of the respondents who are active
in such organizations said that they had to work hard at building and maintaining trust.
Rather than simply happening as members interacted, it required confrontations, staff
meetings, bull sessions, phone calls, and mediation.
People also talked about constructing rules within civic organizations that served as
heuristics for making decisions about trust. These rules were often quite explicit:
Members did not have to rely on implicit norms about whether or not to trust someone who
failed to show up for meetings or who took handouts but did not look for a job.
Because these are gray areas, organizations created local understandings about how to
regard such behavior. Consequently, participants did not have to trust a "generalized
other," but could respond according to the rules they had learned in these
organizations. The baby-sitting co-op provided detailed information to members about what
to expect and what not to expect; garden club members developed a voucher system to avoid
confusion about who owed favors to whom; a homeless shelter adopted a rule that in effect
told volunteers to trust whatever clients told them the first time, but to ask more
questions on subsequent visits. In these ways, the presence of civic organizations helped
to define the conditions under which trust could be exercised.
The frames that privileged Americans use to justify their faith in people suggest a
final lesson. Given that trust of others and trust of oneself depend so heavily on the
resources and opportunities at one's disposal, the problem of mistrust can only be
addressed adequately by including efforts to redress injustice and inequality. It is not
enough to blame negative campaign rhetoric or the nihilism of popular culture. African
Americans are not less trusting than white European Americans because they watch the wrong
kind of television. They are less trusting because they have fewer economic resources to
risk and are more in danger of being victims of violent crime. Those who generalize from
their experiences in safe, affluent suburban families may not always recognize the
importance of social circumstances in promoting a willingness to trust.
-- Robert Wuthnow
Robert Wuthnow, professor of social science at Princeton University, is the author,
most recently, of Poor Richard's Principle: Recovering the American Dream through the
Moral Dimension of Work, Business, and Money (Princeton University Press, 1996).
Sources: General Social Surveys and other national surveys conducted by the National
Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago; Robert D. Putnam, "Bowling
Alone: America's Declining Social Capital," Journal of Democracy (January
1995); Putnam, "Tuning In, Tuning Out: The Strange Disappearance of Social Capital in
America" (The Ithiel de Sola Pool Lecture, American Political Science Association,
1995), P.S.: Political Science and Politics, vol. 27 (December 1995); Putnam,
"The Strange Disappearance of Civic America," American Prospect (Winter
1996) [http://epn.org/prospect/24/24putn.html]); Eric M. Uslaner, "Faith, Hope, and
Charity: Social Capital, Trust, and Collective Action," unpublished paper, Department
of Government and Politics, University of Maryland (1996); Self-Esteem Survey, Gallup
Organization (1982); Robert Wuthnow, Sharing the Journey: Support Groups and America's
New Quest for Community (Free Press, 1994); Erving Goffman, Frame Analysis: An
Essay on the Organization of Experience (Harper & Row, 1974); Robert Wuthnow, God
and Mammon in America (Free Press, 1994); Adam Seligman, The Problem of Trust
(Princeton University Press, 1997); Russell Hardin, "The Street-Level Epistemology of
Trust," Politics and Society, vol. 21 (December 1993).
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