This study delves into the symmetric effects of governance on economic growth for the world's ten largest economies, employing a model augmented with well-known growth, governance, and control predictors to inform model specification. Using panel and time-series techniques, both collectively and individually, the initial results reveal that governance predictors and growth postulate a long-run symmetric nexus. Applying the autoregressive distributed lags (ARDL) model, the results show that although governance predictors positively impact the economic growth of the panel both in the short and long runs, growth is weakly sensitive to governance predictors. The results of the ARDL estimates for cross-country show that Canada's growth is highly sensitive to governance predictors, followed by France, showing moderate sensitivity. Moreover, the findings support the notion that the US, China, Germany, India, the UK, Brazil, and Italy exhibit weak sensitivity to governance predictors. Besides, the error-correction results demonstrate a high speed of adjustment of the short-run symmetries of the panel to its long-run equilibrium. Since economic growth swiftly responds to the rise and fall of governance predictors, specific policy adjustments are required to maintain sustainable and long-run growth.