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prada black saffiano lux tote have a faded label, you might be able to ID a handbag brand by comparing your faded label to the pictures. I'll be adding more labels the page soon. I have more to post.I Want You to Start SpendingWe've All Lost The Taste For Risk; For Our Economy To Recover and Thrive, 'Hoarders must open our wallets and become consumers, and businesses must once again be willing to roll the dice,' writes Daniel Gross'We've gone from age of entitlement to age of thrift,' says PIMCO CEONEW YORK, March 15 PRNewswire With the economy in its 16th month of recession and the markets cut in half, it seems we've all lost the taste for risk, writes Newsweek Senior Editor Daniel Gross in the current issue. "In the grip of a bubble mentality, we as investors, consumers and businesses blithely assumed risk and convinced ourselves it was perfectly safe to do so," he writes. But now, "the zeitgeist has spun 180 degrees. Squeeze your nickels, slash debt, stop gambling," Gross writes in the March 23 Newsweek cover, "I Want You to Start Spending!" on newsstands Monday, March 16. "For our $14 trillion economy to recover and thrive, hoarders must open their wallets and become consumers, and businesses must once again be willing to roll the dice."In his essay, Gross explains how not spending anything now could mean bigger problems in the future. The rush to hoard cash and pinch pennies is understandable, given that some $13 trillion in net worth evaporated between mid 2007 and the end of 2008, Gross writes. "But while it makes complete microeconomic sense for families and individual businesses, the spending freeze and collective shunning of nonguaranteed investments is macroeconomically troubling. Especially if it persists once the credit crisis passes.""The precautionary behavior of every entity in the global economy has gone up," Mohamed El Arian, CEO of the giant bond investment fund PIMCO, tells Newsweek. "We've gone from an age of entitlement to an age of thrift."Gross writes that nobody is advocating a return to the debt fueled days of "4,000 square foot second homes, $1,000 handbags and $6 specialty coffees. But in our economy, in which 70 percent of activity is derived from