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Assuming she runs, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has assembled a formidable lead in the race for the 2016 Democratic presidential nomination. But there’s still a chance she’ll get some competition before the primaries and caucuses start next year. One of those potential candidates is Martin O’Malley, who served two terms as governor of Maryland. O’Malley, like Clinton, hasn’t officially announced a bid yet, but he recently traveled to New Hampshire , home of the first-in-the-nation primary, and he sat for an interview with George Stephanopoulos on ABC’s This Week . During the interview, O’Malley decried the long-term economic fraying of the American dream, saying the United States has had 12 years in a row of wages declining. A reader suggested we check out this claim, so we did. We turned to data from the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics, zeroing in on the annual averages for median, inflation-adjusted, usual, weekly earnings for full-time wage and salary workers. That sounds like a mouthful -- but when we ran it by two economists, Tara Sinclair of George Washington University and Gary Burtless of the Brookings Institution, both said it was the same metric they would have used. Here’s a summary of the data between 2002 and 2014: Year Median, inflation-adjusted, usual, weekly earnings for full-time wage and salary workers (annual average) Change from previous year 2002 $ 338 -- 2003 337 $ -1 2004 338 +1 2005 333 -5 2006 333 0 2007 335 +2 2008 335 0 2009 345 +10 2010 342 -3 2011 336 -6 2012 335 -1 2013 333 -2 2014 334 +1 Whole period (2002-2014) -- -4 Here’s where O’Malley has a point: Wages were indeed lower in 2014 than they were 12 years earlier. But here’s where his phrasing is misleading: It’s not accurate to say the United States has had 12 years in a row of wages declining. This makes it sound like wages dropped, in lockstep, in each of those 12 years. That’s not the case -- as the chart above shows, wages fell in six of the 12 years, rose in four years, and remained steady in two years. Indeed, over the 12-year period in question, weekly earnings remained in a fairly narrow band -- sometimes rising, sometimes falling, but only deviating by $4 a week over 12 years, a decline of just over 1 percent from where they started in 2002. That’s more accurately described as a sideways trend line than as a steady decline. Gov. O’Malley misspoke or simply was in error, Burtless said. O’Malley’s office did not dispute the data we found. Spokeswoman Lis Smith said O’Malley has previously used a different formulation -- that over the last 12 years, wages have been going down, not up. He used that phrasing in Iowa recently, for instance. And that wording would have been more accurate than what he said on This Week . Our ruling O’Malley said that in the United States, we’ve had 12 years in a row of wages declining. He has a point that, using the most appropriate measure of compensation, weekly wages adjusted for inflation are lower now than they were 12 years ago. But they have not fallen consistently and inexorably, as the phrasing of his claim on This Week suggests. We rate the claim Half True.
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