Unemployment has soared to a 12-year high of more than 2.2 million after a record number of people lost their jobs in recent months, gloomy new figures showed.

The jobless total increased by 232,000 in the three months to April to reach 2.26 million, the worst figure since the end of 1996.

The number of people claiming jobseeker's allowance increased by 39,300 in May to 1.54 million, the highest total since the summer of 1997.

The so-called claimant count has now increased for 15 months in a row.

The latest claimant count for Wirral has increased by an average of just over 5%.

Figures from the Office for National Statistics, broken down by Parliamentary constituency, show:

Birkenhead has 3,706 claimants - up 5.8%

Wirral South has 1,481 claimants - up 3.8%

Wirral West has 1,515 claimants - up 5.6%

Wallasey has 3,104 claimants - up 5.1%

Other figures from the ONS showed youth unemployment has reached its worst level since 1994 after a 74,000 increase in the number of 18 to 24-year-olds out of work to 695,000.

Long term unemployment, counting those out of work for more than a year, increased by 54,000 in the latest quarter to a 10-year high of 515,000.

Alan Tomlinson, a partner with UK insolvency practitioners Tomlinsons, said:

"These latest figures are better than expected although any talk of green shoots is still grossly out of sync with the reality on the ground.

"From where I'm standing things are as bad now as they were a few months ago.

"The small and medium-sized companies that we deal with each day are still being decimated by sharp drops in turnover, growing debts and, critically, the ongoing failure of the banks to lend.

"The Government claims it is pressurizing the banks to make funds more readily available but we've yet to see any evidence of this.

"Unemployment will continue to rise until at least early 2010, even if the rate at which it increases begins to stabilize.

"We're not out of the woods yet."

Meanwhile, the number of people in work fell by 271,000 over the three months to 29.11 million, the biggest quarterly slump since comparable records began in 1971.

Public sector employment increased by 15,000 to more than six million - the highest since comparable records began in 1999 - although most of the increase was because of banking working switching from the private sector under the Government's rescue.

More than 300,000 people were made redundant in the three months to April, an increase of 36,000 on the previous quarter and the highest total since records began in 1995.

Average earnings increased by 0.8% in the year to April, an increase of 1.1% on the last month's record low. Excluding bonuses, wages rose by 2.7%, down by 0.3%