First of all, the question is deceptively worded, since U+002D is called hyphen-minus, not dash. Which dilutes the strength of the argument considerably.
(Yes, the title was edited to say "hyphen" instead of "dash", which is an improvement; but it still feels slightly evasive, and the illustrative example still says "dash".)
I am sympathetic to the idea that "minus sign" (U+2212) might be the most semantically appropriate choice. I'm also sympathetic to the idea that typographical alignment is generally desirable.
If U+2212 consistently improved screen-reader results versus U+002D, that would be enough to sway me into the U+2212 camp. As it stands, the results suggest U+2212 is not a clear improvement on this front, and could actually make things worse.
On balance, I think hyphen-minus is semantically and aesthetically "right enough" that it's not worth changing.
+
character to make it as narrow as the-
should work as well. Not so: the stem widths would be different.-10
is very clearly narrower than the+76
. Also, in most commonly used fonts, the digits are 'tabular lining', that is, they are all equal width, and the+
and minus are as well. The number of signs and the number of digits above and below are the same, so they should align. No need for monospaced text at all.