There are standard impedances which are applied to speakers, to reduce confusion about which tap to chose. In the US those were 8 and 16 ohms in the Good Old Days. There was also a widespread rating of 3.2 ohms for cheap utility speakers (intercoms, cheap radios, cheap PA, etc). 4 ohms is a more recent rating that became common about the time that solid-state amplifiers appeared.
In England the older common ratings were 3 ohms (cheap) and 15 ohms (high fidelity).
In recent years, many other values are used - probably because solid-state amps do not need to have taps selected for optimal power transfer.
In addition to the wide variation of actual impedance of speakers, most output transformers have secondary turns ratios of 2:3:4 or 3:4:6 relative to the 4-ohm tap. This gives actual impedance of 4, 9, and 16 ohms or 4, 7, and 16 ohms respectively. They are all still labelled 4, 8, and 16 ohms.