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By the late 1980s, growing numbers of Hungarians had concluded that years of misgovernment could not be erased by economic reforms alone. The process of de-Stalinization reinforced the desire to reexamine the political premises of Grósz’s program, which seemed to imply that to keep their hard-won personal freedoms Hungarians should pay with economic misery and further social polarization. By the time the annual inflation rate reached 17 percent, public pressure compelled the party conference in May 1988 to replace Kádár with Grósz and also to replace several of Kádár’s supporters within the Politburo and the Central Committee. In November 1988 ...(100 of 37110 words)