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BackDaniel Gros on Euro Lessons and Yuan Internationalisation Challenges
Daniel Gros on Euro Lessons and Yuan Internationalisation Challenges
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SCMP Economy26.04.2026Business2 dk okumaChina

Daniel Gros on Euro Lessons and Yuan Internationalisation Challenges

Bocconi professor examines structural tensions in EU-China economic ties and why stablecoins won't shift global monetary order

Auf einen Blick

  • Daniel Gros, director of the Institute for European Policymaking at Bocconi University, explains why the euro failed to rival the US dollar and applies those lessons to the yuan.
  • He identifies the dollar's 'lock-in effect'—its deep, open financial markets and network advantages—as the key barrier.
  • Gros argues that international currency status requires open capital accounts, which means losing control over exchange rates—the same trade-off that made Germany reluctant to globalise the Deutschmark.

KI-generierte Zusammenfassung

Warum es wichtig ist

This interview examines lessons from over two decades of euro internationalisation and applies them to China's yuan. The euro was created in 1999 with the expectation it would rival the US dollar, but has remained a secondary global currency.

Schriftgröße

Daniel Gros is the director of the Institute for European Policymaking at Bocconi University. Previously, he served as an adviser to the European Parliament, collaborated with the European Commission as economic adviser to the Delors Committee, which developed plans for the euro, and worked at the International Monetary Fund. In this interview, Gros examines the structural tensions shaping EU-China economic ties, draws lessons from the euro's experience to analyse the yuan's internationalisation, and explains why stablecoins and central bank digital currencies are limited in fundamentally shifting the global monetary order.

After more than two decades since the creation of the euro, what's the biggest lesson that can be learned from its internationalisation? What do you think can apply to the yuan?

When the euro was created many had the illusion that it would rival the US dollar. But one should keep in mind that the key advantage of the [US] dollar is twofold. First, it has a very deep and broad financial market. It is very open. Second, once a currency is used everywhere in the world, then why should people change? If you are in Latin America, Africa or somewhere in Asia, and you want to deal with somebody else – even especially those who are not in the US – instead of having to deal with national currencies, you just take the dollar as the common denominator. Once everybody has chosen the dollar, why should they change? I think this is the lock-in effect the dollar has, and it is very difficult to get into.

Moreover, if you want your currency to become international, you have to have an open capital account. That means you lose control over the value of your currency. That is the trade-off: having a global currency requires letting its value be determined globally. That is why the Germans in the past did not want the Deutschmark to become a global currency, because then they would lose control over their exchange rates.

Offene Fragen

  • What specific reforms would the yuan need to achieve international status?
  • How might technological changes (digital currencies) alter the dollar's lock-in effect?
  • What timeline might China face for yuan internationalisation if it pursues the necessary reforms?

Verwandte Themen

This article was originally published by SCMP Economy.

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