Full article on Econostream hereThe ECB's Chief Economist, Philip Lane, argues that the Eurozone’s financial architecture is currently hindered by a shortage of euro-denominated safe assets. While the German Bund serves as the primary benchmark, its supply is too limited to satisfy global demand or provide the deep liquidity necessary for a truly autonomous monetary system. Lane suggests that the Eurozone needs a larger stock of common debt, jointly backed by member states, to fund public goods and strategic priorities like support for Ukraine. However, he acknowledges that expanding common debt requires significant political will and a commitment to fiscal discipline across all member nations to ensure the safety of these assets.Despite these aspirations for a stronger international role for the euro, the US dollar is likely to remain the dominant global currency for the foreseeable future. The primary reason is the sheer depth and liquidity of the US Treasury market, which dwarfs any current or proposed European alternative. For a currency to serve as a global reserve, it requires a massive, unified pool of safe assets that can support complex global repo and derivatives markets. As Lane highlights, the Eurozone remains fragmented, and the political hurdles to creating a unified fiscal capacity are immense.Moreover, the de-dollarization narrative often underestimates the power of network effects. Most of the world’s trade and debt are denominated in dollars, creating a cycle where businesses and central banks prefer the greenback because everyone else uses it. Alternatives like the euro or the Chinese yuan face structural challenges. The euro lacks a unified fiscal backstop, and the yuan is limited by capital controls. Until a competitor can provide the same combination of liquidity, legal transparency, and a unified safe asset, the dollar’s status as the "king" of the global financial system is not under any immediate threat. This article was written by Giuseppe Dellamotta at investinglive.com.