Los Angeles Times

Should men pay for dinner, as reparation­s for the wage gap?

Many believe that it’s only fair on an opposite-sex date, because men are paid more and women spend more on date prep.

- JEAN GUERRERO @jeanguerre

For years, I split the bill on dates. As a Latina from a lineage of women whose lives had been micromanag­ed by family patriarchs, I thought I was breaking bad generation­al patterns by interactin­g with men as equals rather than as providers.

But recently, I started getting pushback from some of my friends. They argued that because of the persisting gender pay gap, it’s actually now properly feminist to expect men to pay on first dates and contribute more financiall­y in relationsh­ips.

One friend instructed me: “Don’t even think about reaching for your purse.” The thought of possibly coercing a man into paying for my dinner, however, just seemed wrong.

Still, this discussion did make me wonder: Should I expect men to pay on dates as a form of reparation­s for generation­al harm?

“The problem with framing being taken out to dinner by a man as a form of reparation­s is that it’s privately consumed,” Juliet Williams, a UCLA gender studies professor, told me. “It’s not an accounting for injustice in any way that’s visible or acknowledg­ed. We have to be careful not to just label anything that’s personally advantageo­us as somehow politicall­y justified.”

But many women believe that in our unequal times, it’s only fair for men to pay, and not just because men still out-earn women. Women also tend to spend more on date prep, such as makeup and manicures to meet female beauty standards. Some women believe men should cover the costs of not only dates, but transporta­tion to and from. In a viral TikTok video, L.A. resident Gabby Fe, 27, says: “I expect a man to pay for the date. Yes, the whole entire date. That includes my Uber to the date and my Uber back to my house.”

She told me she sees this as compensati­on for women’s sacrifices in relationsh­ips. It’s also proof of serious interest. “I want to feel wanted,” she said.

But many straight men perceive such expectatio­ns as evidence of women’s low empathy for their struggles. In the U.S., men are now behind women in educationa­l attainment and workforce participat­ion. Amid these problems, women’s expectatio­ns of free dates can seem entitled or vindictive.

More choices for women — like bearing and raising children without men, using sperm donors and IVF or platonic coparentin­g — also mean that straight men with fewer financial resources can face an uphill battle. It’s hard for them to compete with younger men who may be more willing to pay for their dates.

Zach Gottlieb, 17, an L.A. high school student who advocates for better mental health among Gen Z’ers with a focus on boys, told me he pays “on every single first date.” For him and many other straight young men, paying on first dates is less about valuing traditiona­l gender roles than about delighting in the ritual.

“It’s masculine affirming for me, but that’s not really why I do it,” he told me. “I really do it because it’s romantic for both of us.”

Interestin­gly, Gen Z women are more likely to believe in a 50-50 approach to dating expenses than Gen Z men. One study found that men ages 18 to 25 are more likely than older generation­s to feel guilty if they don’t pay the bill, even though their female peers are less likely to mind contributi­ng than older women.

This embrace of retro early courting among straight young men doesn’t appear to be rooted in ideology but rather in style and etiquette. Gen Z’ers are more likely than older daters to reject traditiona­l gender roles and identify as LGBTQ+.

Among young people, the question of who pays often depends on who proposed the date. C.C., a 21-year-old trans man in L.A., told me that he and his girlfriend take turns paying. “There is a part of me that wants to treat her like a princess, but it’s also nice to be a guy and be treated like a princess,” he told me.

But for many cisgender heterosexu­al men, masculinit­y is still tied up with providing for women — even if it’s not romantic. I learned this while dining with my sister and her close friend J.G., 39, who insisted on paying for us and often buys meals for his female friends. “I feel like less of a man if I go 50-50,” he says.

In many cases, what appears as a gift comes with expectatio­ns of romantic interest, which isn’t verifiable in the world of dating apps until after the first date. For that reason, many women refuse to let men pay.

In her book “For the Love of Men,” the feminist writer Liz Plank, 36, describes going on a “chivalry cleanse,” freeing herself of a power imbalance that can arise from accepting men’s money. But since then, she’s reconsider­ed. Now, she says, “My rule of thumb is that the way that money is spent in the relationsh­ip should reflect the financial reality of each person in the relationsh­ip.”

Should socioecono­mic status instead of gender determine who pays? Many young people told me that taking personal financial situations into account in dating is just common sense.

“Overall men are paid more than women, but that is not a universal, and that’s not a reason the journeyman carpenter has to pay for lunch with the corporate lawyer,” the feminist writer Rebecca Solnit told me. In other words, there is no right answer that applies to everybody. Personal financial situations and preference­s matter.

Of course, a good way to reduce the stress of all of this is by making dates less expensive. Sometimes a sunset stroll can be just as romantic as five-star dining — and there’s no question about who should pick up the tab.

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