Kansas wants you, America

And more of the week's best financial insight

Kansas.
(Image credit: Jacqueline Nix/iStock)

Here are three of the week's top pieces of financial insight, gathered from around the web:

Bad financial advice for teachers

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Investing while black

Secret recordings at a Phoenix bank branch reveal "what racism in the banking industry sounds like," said Emily Flitter at The New York Times. Jimmy Kennedy, a former NFL lineman, started recording conversations with his financial adviser at JPMorgan Chase after he moved $800,000 into the bank but "kept getting the runaround" about becoming a private client, a status "reserved for accounts with more than $250,000." When he tried to find out why, Kennedy, who is black, was told that "bank employees were scared of dealing with him." "We're in Arizona," the adviser said. "I don't have to tell you about what the demographics are in Arizona. They don't see people like you a lot."

Kansas wants you, America

Topeka will pay you up to $15,000 to move there, said Kevin Hardy at The Kansas City Star. With the state capital's unemployment rate at 2.9 percent, near a 10-year low, businesses are struggling to fill openings and attract new talent. The "Choose Topeka" program, approved last week, offers up to $15,000 to pay for moving expenses for anyone who buys a primary home in the city, and $10,000 for people who rent. One caveat before you rush to pack up your stuff: The program has only $300,000 in its coffers for the first year. The city's difficulties mirror those of many smaller cities in an increasingly centralized economy. Topeka's not Kansas City, one local business leader says, where "you have a 2 million–plus metro, which sells itself."