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Material needs and aggregate demand

This article proposes an individual-level needs-based model of consumption, shows that the form of the resulting aggregate excess demand function is not arbitrary, and concludes that basic material needs are necessary for macroeconomics to have micro-foundations.

Eric Kemp-Benedict / Published on 30 May 2013

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Citation

Kemp-Benedict, E. (2013). Material needs and aggregate demand. The Journal of Socio-Economics 26, 16–26 (published online February 2013).

A central conclusion of the standard theory of consumption is that consumers’ preferences can be taken as theoretical primitives. Special categories of consumption, such as “basic needs”, or of goods, such as “subsistence goods” are seen as extra theoretical baggage that add few, if any, insights.

This theoretical orientation has been absorbed into the theory of aggregate demand, but the aggregate theory has a serious problem that is not shared by the individual-level theory: no matter how well-behaved the individual-level demand functions may be, the aggregate-level function can take on almost any form.

This result follows from the SMD theorem, named after Sonnenschein, Mantel, and Debreu, who developed the theory; Kirman and Koch strengthened the results, and the SMD–KK theorem poses a fundamental challenge to models linking micro and macroeconomics.

A standard response to the aggregation problem is to introduce a representative agent, but this merely sidesteps the problem. This article argues that the aggregation problem arises, in part, because of the exclusion of needs from the theory. Specifically, it argues that material needs—such as basic needs for energy, water, food, and shelter—must be included as theoretical primitives because both the needs and the satisfiers of those needs are universal.

The author constructs a microeconomic model with material needs and shows that the form of the aggregate excess demand function is not completely arbitrary, so the SMD–KK theorem does not apply. He discusses the implications of this result.

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SEI author

Eric Kemp-Benedict
Eric Kemp-Benedict

SEI Affiliated Researcher

SEI US

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10.1016/j.socec.2013.02.003 Closed access
Topics and subtopics
Economy : Sustainable lifestyles
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economics
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SEI Asia