Ed Miliband is announcing Labour's plan to cut university tuition fees in England to £6,000 per year.
He will reveal how a Labour government would pay for the fee cut - which is likely to include reducing tax relief on pensions for high earners.
The rising level of student debt has been a "disaster", the Labour leader says in a speech in Leeds.
Business Secretary Vince Cable said cutting fees would be "completely financially illiterate".
A Conservative spokesman said under the current system, the numbers of students from disadvantaged backgrounds were at their "highest ever level".
The Labour leader is also expected to promise more support for loans and grants to cover students' living costs. There have been concerns that young people from middle-income families do not have access to sufficient student loans.
Living costsUniversities UK has warned that limiting the fees to £6,000 per year would create a £10bn funding gap over the next five years, threatening "significant damage" to the higher education system.
But Mr Miliband will explain how he believes cutting fees could be funded without reducing universities' income.
This could include reducing tax relief on pensions for high earners, which would be used to provide funds for universities to bridge the gap from reduced fees.
The announcement of Labour's policy on fees has been much delayed, with reports of disagreements between senior party figures over whether cutting tuition fees should be a priority for investment.
Analysis: Iain Watson, BBC political correspondent
Ed Miliband's opponents - inside as well as outside the Labour party - have urged him to drop plans to reduce the maximum level of tuition fees in England from £9,000 to £6,000, arguing that there is little political or economic benefit in doing so.
So today he'll attempt to answer his critics by denouncing the current system as bad both for graduates and for taxpayers as a whole.
He is determined to press on with his policy despite the scepticism, because he believes it will have an inter-generational appeal.
Labour's private polling suggests that tuition fees isn't just an important issue for young people, but that older voters too dislike the idea of the next generation apparently being saddled with debts.
University heads have also argued that the increase in tuition fees to £9,000 has not deterred applications from poorer students, instead the numbers of poorer students have risen.
Mr Miliband will say that the current system is putting unacceptable levels of debt on to young people and proving expensive to the taxpayer, because so much of student loans has to be written off.
Under the present system, students are being left with an average of £44,000 debt, he will say.
"The government has designed a system which is burdening students with debt today and set to weight down the taxpayer with more debt tomorrow," the Labour leader is expected to say.
"This is a system that will have added an extra £16bn more than predicted to public debt by the end of the next Parliament. If left unchecked, the system will have added £281bn to debt by 2030.
"And much of this money will never be paid back. By the late 2040s, student loan write-offs will be hitting £21bn a year - almost double the entire cost of police services in England and Wales. It must go down as one of the most expensive broken promises in history."
'Failed experiment'Mr Miliband will say that young people have been "betrayed" by the tuition fees system, leaving them worse off than previous generations.
"This is a disaster for them and a disaster for the future of Britain too - a country where the next generation is doing worse than their parents is the definition of a country in decline."
The Labour leader will seek to reassure university heads that they will not lose out in the proposed changes.
But Universities UK, representing university leaders, has voiced its concern about cuts to fees.
"Cutting the fees cap from £9,000 to £6,000 creates a £10bn funding gap over the next parliament," said Sir Christopher Snowden, vice-chancellor of the University of Surrey and president of Universities UK.
"Such a shortfall, if not met in full from other sources of public finance, could cause significant damage to the economy, to social mobility, to student choice, and to our universities. For universities, it is a funding question, not a fee question.
"One has to ask whether a policy of cutting fees is sensible given the many other pressing demands on public funding. Students are telling us they need assistance with living costs rather than tuition fees," said Sir Christopher.
The current tuition fee system
- In England, fees up to £9,000 per year, repayments begin once students graduate and earn above £21,000. Unpaid debt written off after 30 years
- In Scotland, no fees for students from Scotland
- In Wales, fees for students from Wales, £3,810
- In Northern Ireland, fees for students from Northern Ireland £3,805
Pam Tatlow, chief executive of the Million+ group of new universities, said lowering fees made "good economic sense".
"Lower tuition fees potentially benefit everyone. Students graduate with less debt. Graduates have less to pay off and taxpayers will have less to write-off in the future."
The National Union of Students has welcomed plans for a cut in fees.
"Forcing debt on to students as a way of funding universities is an experiment that has failed," said NUS vice president, Megan Dunn.
"Higher education is a public good which should be publicly funded and shouldn't involve any additional charges for students or graduates, but lowering tuition fees and a move away from the market in higher education is a positive step forward.
"We would also welcome any improved financial support measures like an increase in maintenance loans, as we know that students are currently in the throes of a cost-of-living crisis."
Vince Cable, Liberal Democrat business secretary, rejected cutting fees as showing "staggering ignorance of how university finance works".
He said cutting fees "would wreck the financial sustainability of universities, reduce the support for disadvantaged students and benefit only the richest".
A Conservative party spokesman said: "Providing access to higher education for all hard-working students, irrespective of their background, is a key objective of the government's 2012 reforms.
"Our reforms have seen a record half a million students enter higher education this year, with entry rates for students from disadvantaged backgrounds increasing by over 10% to their highest-ever level.
"As England's top university vice-chancellors have warned, a cut in fees would damage the economy, impact the quality of students' education and set back work on widening access to higher education."
What is your view on university fees? Are you at university or have you recently left? You can share your thoughts by emailing haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk.
If you would be happy to speak further to a BBC journalist, please include a contact telephone number.
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