Let\'s start our reasoning with some backgrounds.

Background 1: Most Chinese government officers, especially high-level ones, have been corrupted. The most common format of corruption is kickbacks.

Background 2: Corrupted officers and corruption-related businessmen hold more than 20% of Chinese wealth, especially currency. If you doubt the proportion, look at china’s Gini coefficient, the figure reached 0.474 in 2012, much more than normal in the world.

Background 3: China now has 100 trillion+ RMB bank saving currency (approx.16 trillion USD), and because of background 2 we mentioned above, 20%+ of them are in the hands of corruption-related officers and businessmen.

Background 4: In China, corruption is illegal. Officers will be seriously punished if caught with clear evidence, and they can even be sentenced to death. And there\\\'s always an accusation called \\\"Huge amount of property from unidentified sources\\\", which means that if the officer can\\\'t explain how he earned the property in a legal way, then he is defined as corrupted.

Background 5: Chinese central government is firmly fighting against corruption; there are news reports every day of high-level officers being put to prison because of corruption. 

From the facts I listed above, I have the following opinions:

Opinion 1: Corruption won\\\'t stop or slow down. This is a culture in China which has a history of 2000+ years. 

Opinion 2: Officers have always been dying to find a good way to \\\"safely\\\" receive bribes and store their wealth. That\\\'s the reason why the price of Chinese antiques and collectibles have been rising sharply in the past decades.

The best example is the stamp of 1980 zodiac monkey. The currency value on the stamp is 8 cents RMB. And the current price of that stamp is around 10K RMB, nearly 100K+ times rise within 30 years. The power behind the rise is the corruption-driven need to store their gray wealth.

As a “corruption tool”, monkey stamps have the following advantages:

1. Extremely portable. A bag with one million RMB is too showy, but if the money is converted to 100 monkey stamps, they can be put in a small chewing gum box. This is extremely important for bribery.

2.  The authorities can\\\'t define its acquiring cost. Because 100 monkey stamps only worth 8 RMB in 1980, and no evidence can show the time of their trading, so inquisitors can\\\'t evaluate 100 monkey stamps as \\\"huge property\\\". This will make the corrupted officer free of charge even when he is caught with clear evidence.

Butmonkey stamp also has some shortcomings:

1. Fake copies. The stamp is made by printing technology in the 1980s, so making a fake copy is very easy nowadays. And officers are not professional collectors, they can\\\'t tell which one is fake.

2. Stamps need to be carefully stored and protected. The stamp is just a piece of paper, if bent, polluted or bitten, its value will be seriously undermined or even disappear. It\\\'s also vulnerable to theft.

3.  Not easy to transact for money. The officer himself has to go to a stamp market to change the stamp into money. This is a dangerous action because it will attract attention from anti-corruption bureau.

4.  Difficult to take abroad and transact for money. The Customs of China don’t allow high-value collectibles to go abroad. And few people abroad are willing to buy a Chinese stamp.

Now, Bitcoin has come!

 Opinion 3: Bitcoin is a perfect solution for corrupted officers to store their wealth.

Compared to monkey stamp, Bitcoin not only has all its advantages, but also solved all its shortcomings:

1. Perfectly portable. Bitcoin is a virtual property. It\\\'s everywhere, it\\\'s pervasive. If the wallet.dat is in a cloud disk, and the holder remembers the password in his brain, he can use his Bitcoin anywhere in the world when connected to the internet.

2. Extremely low starting price. One Bitcoin worthed only 1/1000 USD 4 years ago. Since people don’t know when you get them, all the 12 million Bitcoin can not be defined as \\\"huge property\\\".

3. No fake ones.

4. No storage cost.

5. Can be spent anywhere in the world. Because Bitcoin is money, it doesn’t need to be sold. There\\\'re more and more Bitcoin ATMs installed around the world and a huge number of stores have begun to accept bitcoin payment.

6. It\\\'s everywhere, no need to be inspected by the Customs.

Opinion 4: Corrupted officers won\\\'t speculate in Bitcoin. They will never sell Bitcoin in a formal exchange center (Background 5: all RMB exchange centers require users to register with their real names), and they won\\\'t trade in an underground market either, because all these actions will increase the risk of being tracked and caught. They will only spend or sell the Bitcoin when they really need to. Because they are accepting bribes everyday, selling or spending Bitcoin is a rare action for them.

Background 6: CCTV (China Central Television) has clusters of reports about Bitcoin in the past quarter. Because all the officers and bribers are very sensitive to new bribery tools, I\\\'m sure most of them have been aware of the superb advantages of Bitcoin.

Opinion 5: More and more “corruption RMB” will be exchanged to Bitcoin, and these Bitcoin will be frozen.  Let\\\'s say 10 trillion RMB will be changed into Bitcoin, this means Bitcoin price will be 10t/21m=500K RMB, or aprox.100K USD, which means 100 times rise. And because of opinion 4 I stated above, the early buyers will buy more Bitcoin with small money, and few of them will sell for profit, this will contribute to another 10 times rise.

From what we have discussed above, we can safely draw the conclusion that Chinese corrupted officers will push Bitcoin price up 1000 times.