No, you also said that Carter had "consistently high unemployment," which is incorrect. And I acknowledged that inflation and interest rates were indeed high, but that inflation was ebbing and interest rates were high to produce that effect (so bitching about both the problem -- high inflation -- and the solution -- high interest rates -- is stupid) and that these were the result of FED policies that the President does not control.
Because Reagan had time sufficient for that to occur. Carter didn't have that.
But you praise Reagan for making the economy shittier (when really it was the FED) while shitting on Carter (again, really the FED) for doing the same thing. Reagan benefited from having time on his side, while Carter didn't.
Actually, I didn't say that. I said that I didn't say that the President has no influence over the FED. There's a difference. And no, it isn't a coincidence that the FED cut rates because (1) it didn't really cut rates all that much (the range was tweaked slightly, but the market reaction was dramatic) and (2) inflation started to ebb in response to the dramatic rate increase. The high interest rate policy was working, so the FED signaled that it would reduce rates.
The evidence you have for this assertion is exactly zero. What actually happened is this: (1) the FED increased rates to stem inflation; (2) inflation started to ebb and the FED slightly lowered its target rate; (3) the market rate decreased dramatically in response to the lower target range; (4) inflation began to level out and to tick up slightly signaling that the effect of high rates was transitory; (5) the FED increased rates substantially and inflation subsided; (6) the FED again reduced the bench mark rate range (1981 now) and again inflation leveled off and began to increase; (6) the FED responded by again raising rates and inflation dropped accordingly; (7) the early 1980s recession started and the FED maintained elevated rates as necessary to control inflation until it was back down to acceptable levels.
The chart below (that I'm posting again) tells the whole story. Carter and Reagan had nothing to do with it:
You miss my point. If Reagan's term spanned from 1979 - 1983, instead of 1981 - 1985, he likely would have been a one term president. Timing matters.