Lets compare shall we.
1) Taxes (Inflation adjusted will top, middle, and floor rates for space purposes)
http://taxfoundation.org/sites/taxfoundation.org/files/docs/fed_individual_rate_history_adjusted.pdf
Obama:
Top Rate: Married 441k, Single 392k: 39.6% (Those over 250k pay extra 0.9% Medicare tax)
High Income Capital Gains Married 250k, Single 200k - 20% (plus new Obamacare 3.8% Medicare tax which is the same as the income Medicare tax)
Middle Rates: Married 143k Single 86k - 28% Married 71k, Single 35.5k - 25%
Floor Rate: 10% up to 17k for married, 8.5k for Single
Reagan (We'll go to 1988 the year Reagan's final tax bracket was passed into law, also increased SS that year to today's rates):
Top Rate:Married over 57k, Single over 34k - 28%
Bottom Rate: 15%
Capital Gains rates were the same
Kennedy/LBJ (We'll use 1965 the year after it was passed into law in 1964, also same year Medicare was passed. SS was half of what it was today):
Top Rate: Married 1.4 million, Single 729k: 70%
High Capital Gains Rate: Don't have the data I believe it was 52% not sure of the cutoff point. I believe LBJ/Kennedy bill raised the capital gains rates along while cutting the income rates.
Middle Rates:
22.0% Married: $58,310-$87,464 Single: $29,155-$43,732
25.0% Married: $87,464-$116,619 Single: $43,732-$58,310
28.0% Married: $116,619-$145,774 Single: $58,310-$72,887
Bottom Rates:
14.0% Married: $0 - $7,289 14.0% Single: $0 - $3,644
15.0% Married: $7,289 - $14,577 Single: $3,644 - $7,289
So if my math serves me correct Obama is much closer to Reagan's tax numbers than Kennedy/LBJ's.
So Obama is closer to Reaganomics than pre Reaganomics.
Issue # 2: Free Trade
Obama: Yes
Reagan: Yes (free trade basically started under Nixon but exploded under Reagan)
LBJ/Kennedy: Used Tarriffs
Again still in Reaganomics
Issue # 3: Social Safety Net
Reagan did believe in Medicaid, but want to cut other Social Safety Net spending. In this area Obama is more simular to LBJ.
What has actually happened though under the Obama adminstration has been a fixed bag while Obamacare dramatically expanded the safety net. The lack of Medicaid expansion in states hurt it. Also we've seen cuts to Medicare (although it was more effeciency related) and food stamps under the Obama administration.
I wouldn't say we our out of Reaganomics although we've pushed away from it.
Issue #4:
Education:
Obama policy wise much more simular to Kennedy/LBJ (the former who campaigned on building new schools from the revenue generate from closing tax loopholes). College assistant has increased under Obama mostly through tax credits.
Although it is a far cry from the pre Reagan days were the cost of sending a student to a state college was subsidized by the government (on all levels) 80% as opposed to 20% in today. Which started under Reagan when he cut the education budget from 12% to 6%. University of California was a free college until Reagan became governor and cut the funding because he didn't like the hippi attitude that developed on college campus. Lots of governors followed his example.
As a nation we have not reached pre Reagan status in terms of the cost of higher education.
Issue # 5: Regulation of Trust
Before Reagan we had no Wal Marts and other giant companies because we enforced the Sherman Antitrust Act. Since Reagan no President including Clinton, and Obama have enforced it.
Issue #6: Banking
Because of the issue # 5 prior to Reagan we didn't have any "too big to fail" banks. Obama did nothing to these the institutions that helped cause the financial crisis.
Also we deregulated all the banking rules under Reagan as well as Clinton. Glass Steagall used to seperate heavy gambling investment banking from personal banking (mortage, checking, savings, etc) but that was ended by Gramm–Leach–Bliley Act.
So when you through this issues and compare Presidents but more importantly compare the actual policy that is enacted right now and we are clearly still in a Reagan economy not a pre Reagan economy. The 2013 for better or worse is still a product of Reaganomics and Obama/Bill Clinton/ Bush Sr/Bush Jr are not all that much different economically from one another. To be honest the Clinton economy was largely based on luck of the .com bubble and Bush Jr economy was based largely on being President when the some the bubbles like .com bubble and housing bubble burst. Yes Bill Clinton raised taxes a little but most of the President's since Reagan have all been simular.
There are other issues but I think these are the main economic issues. It is probably social issues and foreign policy where you would see more differences. Economically regardless of what an indvidual President may have wanted we have been enacting Reagan policies for 33 years.