fuses give better short circuit pretection over breakers-the fuse will blow faster
For installations with really high short circuit currents indeed, but then for the short protection the exact fuse current rating does not matter that much, the short circuit overload is then dictated by the generic fuse construction (arc management methods,...) rather than its exact rating (the fuse link wire gauge).
So when in combination with a breaker you may put there high enough rating to have good margin from the ballast input currents. The breaker will take care of the lower current faults (rectifying lamp,...), the hard short circuit in the wiring will be then handled by the fuse.
But in normal installation this complexity is not required, because even during the short circuit the current is limited (by the inherent wiring impedances) to a reasonable level for the common breakers to handle safely without the added fuse. Or better to say the common breakers are designed for the short circuit currents expected in the normal installations.
I do not know how exactly the US NEC, but here the electrical code specifies the maximum short circuit current allowed in home installations (at the feed point to the main meter; in industrial installations this applies for all regular socket and normal room lighting circuits as well) as maximum 6kA. The utility company should make sure this limit is never exceeded, include all the allowed tolerances. So if the distribution line exceeds it, they have to install short circuit current limiting devices (most common are "air core" reactor coils, in industrial installations are often used arcing contact limitters - two contacts pressed together by a spring, but separated by the magnetic field from the flowing current, so adding an extra arc impedance in case the short circuit current reaches the set limit; these are way more compact than the chokes and very often this feature is integrated as a part of the circuit breakers, mainly those rated for the higher breaking current capability).