Socialist republicans claim public ownership of productive property can curtail economic domination. Harrison Frye makes a lucid case for doubting this conclusion. 1 Firstly, public ownership may decrease economic efficiency due to high negotiation and agency costs. When this results in fewer economic goods being available to meet people's basic needs, then they will be more vulnerable to domination. Secondly, managers can evade the accountability that would keep dominating power in check if groups with heterogenous interests participate in economic governance, since these groups can be played off against one another, under conditions where criteria for judging managerial performance are muddied. Frye is correct to think economic efficiency and managerial accountability are important considerations when evaluating our institutions from a republican standpoint. They join many other factors which can influence the extent of domination, including the health, education, and happiness of the citizenry, the distribution of wealth, power, and status among them, the presence of the conditions for security, solidarity, and political stability, and so on. Socialist economic