You bring up several interesting issues.
I'd like to address the current issue first. Almost everything you read is about solid-state amps with no output transformer. They generally put out a fixed maximum voltage (the power supply voltage), so the lower the speaker impedance the more current they demand. The Maggies are 4 ohms so at the full power supply voltage they would demand twice the current of an 8 ohm speaker. Many inexpensive amps can't deliver that much current, at least not for very long.
Tube amps on the other hand have transformers with taps, so they can trade off current for voltage. On the 4 ohm tap they will deliver the same power as on 8 ohms, by changing the turns ratio so you get 70% of the voltage at 140% of the current. The concept of a "high-current" tube amp is not so meaningful, since the current/voltage relationship can be altered to match the speaker. A good analogy is that a high-torque motor is necessary in a car with no transmission, but as long as you can downshift (i.e. change the transformer tap) you don't have to care about the engine's torque as such.
There are a few other reasons tube power does not work quite like solid state power. The main one is that tube amps will usually overload gracefully, especially those with little or no negative feedback like SETs. You can drive them surprisingly far into compression and increasing distortion before they sound really nasty. Solid state amps usually exhibit hard clipping, and sound pretty uncomfortable with only a small excursion into overload. There are a couple, more subtle reasons having to do with the different distortion harmonic structure of feedback circuits. But the bottom line is that many experienced listeners want on average a 6dB greater power capability when using good quality solid state amps.
Incidentally, the MG12 is a 4-ohms speaker rated 86dB at 2.83v which is 2 watts. The efficiency is therefor 83dB/w/m. This rating method makes sense for solid state amps, but is a little deceptive for tube amp users.