joe quinlan is with us from u.s. trust. e day, we run a high cost infrastructure we cannot afford to fix. joe: we had better fix it, or we will have problems with global competitiveness and global growth. when you go to a city or an airport, you can feel it. tom: if you fly into phoenix, it basically looks like germany or switzerland. it looks gorgeous. it is not about new infrastructure, it is repairing the old stuff. how does london do it? francine: they just shut everything down. see, i think london is a mess. how much is a train ticket in new york for the subway? it is about seven dollars. $2.75, i am told. aboutne: in london, it is seven dollars. you have to make sure that you make it affordable for people who live in the city, in the capital. d.c. andld argue that new york are way out front. this city is so expensive, that if brexit happens, people will leave. joe: that is an important point, in the sense that if you have less people flowing through, the infrastructure -- if you go to asia, china, cambodia, the first t