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  Home > JCE Print > Journal of Chemical Education > Issues > 1996  > October  >
In the Classroom
Inflation Rates, Car Devaluation, and Chemical Kinetics
Lionello Pogliani and Màrio Nuno Berberan-Santos
Centro de Quìmica-Fìsica Molecular, IST, Av. Rovisco Pais, 1096 Lisboa Codex, Portugal.

1 in sabbatical leave, current address: Dipartimento di Chimica, Università della Calabria. 87030 Rende (CS), Italy.

Cover
October 1996
Vol. 73 No. 10
p. 950

Abstract
The inflation rate problem of a modern economy shows quite interesting similarities with chemical kinetics and especially with first-order chemical reactions. In fact, capital devaluation during periods of rather low inflation rates or inflation measured over short periods shows a dynamics formally similar to that followed by first-order chemical reactions and they can thus be treated by the aid of the same mathematical formalism. Deviations from this similarity occurs for higher inflation rates. The dynamics of price devaluation for two different types of car, a compact car and a luxury car, has been followed for seven years long and it has been established that car devaluation is a process that is formally similar to a zeroth-order chemical kinetic process disregarding the type of car, if car devaluation is much faster than money devaluation. In fact, expensive cars devaluate with a faster rate than inexpensive cars.
More Information
*  Citation
Pogliani, Lionello; Berberan-Santos, Màrio N. J. Chem. Educ. 1996 73 950.
*  Keywords
Introductory/High School Chemistry
*  History
Created:
Last Updated:
September 22, 1999
February 21, 2006
  Home > JCE Print > Journal of Chemical Education > Issues > 1996 > October > Page 950



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