Hi AWK, it says that "Catalysts cannot make energetically unfavorable reactions possible — they have no effect on the chemical equilibrium of a reaction because the rate of both the forward and the reverse reaction are equally affected (see also thermodynamics)."
so, because it can not affect the equilibrium equation, it can't affect the rate constant? Is this what you mean? Or is there another part in the article?
If you are referring to the equilibrium equation, can't it still be in the rate equation because in the equilibrium equation, the top and bottom cancel out. Thus, if the equilibrium is equal to [X][Y]/[C][Y]=>[X]/[C], where [Y] is the catalyst, it can still include the catalyst but it is just that the top and bottom cancel.