http://www.ce-review.org/ebookstore/kosztolanyi1.html
"Legalised corruption in the Communist days pervaded even the middle
and lower echelons of our society in the form of wage calculations based
on the expectation that practitioners of certain professions would be
able to top up their scanty earnings through tips. This was true of
everyone from taxi drivers, through petrol pump operators to doctors
(though the tips there have a grander sounding name,
paraszolvencia or hálapénz, translating literally as
"gratitude money").
Under Kádár, a political position was a means of lining one's pockets, of
living the good life. Party lackeys were an elite, a caste unto
themselves and had many traits in common with today's mafia in the way
they went about their business of bleeding the state dry in creating a
conspiratorial, secretive world where everyone who counts knows everyone
else."
"Never in the brief history of post-Communist democracy has the work
of a parliamentary committee attracted such a great deal of attention or
triggered such an outcry. Part of the fascination with Hungary's Oil
Committee lies not just with the general human preoccupation with the
seamier side of existence, the larger than life characters we have become
so accustomed to from the pages of countless detective novels—and with a
series of unexplained deaths, mafia retaliation hits and bombings, the
oil scandals have all the essential ingredients of any paperback
thriller..."