410 PONTIFICIAE ACADEMIAE SCIENTIARVM SCRIPTA VARIA - 28 accepting indirect rather than direct causal relations between instruments and included variables. (Such a compromise may result in different instruments for different equations when a limited-information estimator is used; this will be the case below). In the present section, we discuss the circumstances under which zero or low inconsistencies can be expected, leaving expli- cit use of the causal criterion to the next section. Now, two sets of candidates for treatment as instrumental variables are obviously present. The first of these consists of those variables which one is willing to assume truly exogenous to the entire system and the lagged values thereof; the second consists of the lagged endogenous variables. The dynamic and causal structure of the system may well provide a third set, however, and may cast light on the appropriateness of the use of lagged endogenous variables; to a discussion of this we now turn. 5.2. The Theory of Block-Recursive Systems A generalization of the recursive systems already discussed is provided by what I have elsewhere termed « block-recursive systems » (*). In general, such systems have similar proper- ties to those of recursive systems when the model is thought of as subdivided into sets of current endogenous variables and corresponding equations (which we shall call sectors) rather than into single endogenous variables and their corresponding equations. Formally, we ask whether it is possible to partition the vectors of variables and of disturbances and the corresponding matrices (renumbering variables and equations, if necessary) to secure a system with certain properties. In such partition- (5) See Fisuer [8] 61 Fisher - pag. 26