See
also: List of Economic Topics 
Aggregation
of individual demand to total, or market, demand
microeconomics
The
demand for various commodities by individuals is generally thought of as the outcome
of a utility-maximizing process. The interpretation of this relationship between
price and quantity demanded of a given good is that, given all the other goods
and constraints, this set of choices is that one which makes the consumer happiest.
Aggregate,
or market, demand curves represent the sum of these individual demand curves.
An important question is whether market demand curves can also be thought of as
being generated by a utility-maximization process. Does the aggregated demand
curve show how to optimise the total utility (happiness) of society? Does it show
how to optimise something else? The answer to these questions is no; market demand
curves generally have no utility interpretation.
Moreover,
even if market demand curves could mathematically be rationalized by a utility
function; they still cannot be economically rationalized as generating an overall
welfare index. There are several reasons for this
Each
person's individual total utility gleaned from purchases depends on the size of
her budget, but the distribution of wealth (and thus her budget) is a separate
(free) variable in the aggregation. In other words, changing the distribution
of wealth (such as giving needy people more resources) will produce a different
total for society's utility.
Each person's demand curve is a function of her
budget, so that if the distribution of wealth changes (by changing the distribution
of prices and thus salaries, and so on), all of the individual demand curves change.
The aggregate effect of such a change is not simple unless all the consumers have
wealth-independent consumption patterns --- that is, unless the pauper and the
billionaire spend the same fraction of their budgets on each item.
Markets
cannot be claimed to select an optimum in the sense of the greatest total utility
of society; indeed, there is not even general agreement on how total utility should
be defined. However, under strictly competitive conditions, market outcomes do
represent a Pareto optimum.
It
has been known since at least 1953 (Gorman, W.M., Community Preference Fields,
Econometrica, 21: 63-80) and 1982 (Shafer, W. and Sonnenschein, H., Market demand
and excess demand functions, in K. J. Arrow and M. D. Intriligator (eds), Handbook
of Mathematical Economics (Vol. II), North-Holland, Amsterdam) that no reasonable
assumptions can circumvent these problems.