For some choices of subsets there are ways to speed up the computation, if you don't mind doing some (potentially expensive) precomputation, but not for all. For instance, suppose your subsets are {1,2}, {2,3}, {3,4}, {4,5}, ..., {n-1,n}, {n,1}; then the naive approach uses one arithmetic operation per subset, and you obviously can't do better than that. On the other hand, if your subsets are {1}, {1,2}, {1,2,3}, {1,2,3,4}, ..., {1,2,...,n} then you can get by with n-1 arithmetic ops, whereas the naive approach is much worse.
Here's one way to do the precomputation. It will not always find optimal results. For each pair of subsets, define the transition cost to be min(size of symmetric difference, size of Y - 1). (The symmetric difference of X and Y is the set of things that are in X or Y but not both.) So the transition cost is the number of arithmetic operations you need to do to compute the sum of Y's elements, given the sum of X's. Add the empty set to your list of subsets, and compute a minimum-cost directed spanning tree using Edmonds' algorithm (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edmonds%27_algorithm) or one of the faster but more complicated variations on that theme. Now make sure that when your spanning tree has an edge X -> Y you compute X before Y. (This is a "topological sort" and can be done efficiently.)
This will give distinctly suboptimal results when, e.g., you have {1,2}, {3,4}, {1,2,3,4}, {5,6}, {7,8}, {5,6,7,8}. After deciding your order of operations using the procedure above you could then do an optimization pass where you find cheaper ways to evaluate each set's sum given the sums already computed, and this will probably give fairly decent results in practice.
I suspect, but have made no attempt to prove, that finding an optimal procedure for a given set of subsets is NP-hard or worse. (It is certainly computable; the set of possible computations you might do is finite. But, on the face of it, it may be awfully expensive; potentially you might be keeping track of about 2^n partial sums, be adding any one of them to any other at each step, and have up to about n^2 steps, for a super-naive cost of (2^2n)^(n^2) = 2^(2n^3) operations to try every possibility.)
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